Pair Of Adjoining Barns New Barn Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 31 October 1986. Barn.
Pair Of Adjoining Barns New Barn Farm
- WRENN ID
- riven-plinth-gilt
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 31 October 1986
- Type
- Barn
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a pair of adjoining barns with an integral stable, dating from the late 18th century and early to mid-19th century. The 18th-century barn is constructed from limestone rubble, while the 19th-century barn features coursed squared and dressed limestone, along with limestone rubble. Both sections have stone slate roofing, although the open-fronted store at the south gable end of the 19th-century barn has a corrugated iron roof. The barns have a long rectangular plan, with the 18th-century barn facing the A40 road and the 19th-century barn containing the stable and open-fronted store on the south side.
On the north-west front, the 18th-century barn has double plank doors located off-centre to the left, with a similar doorway directly opposite and ventilation slits. The 19th-century barn features a plank doorway off-centre to the right, set within the blocking of a small segmental-headed double doorway, along with a single-light window to the left and a segmental-headed pitching window above. The south-east front includes a double plank doorway off-centre to the left with a concrete lintel, a plank door to the right, and a pitching door in the upper right corner. There is a four-bay open-fronted store to the left, divided by timber uprights on pyramidal padstones, and a single-bay extension with a doorway to the left. The gable end of the 18th-century barn features flat coping.
Inside, the structure is divided into two barns, with the stable incorporated within the 19th-century section. The late 18th-century barn consists of three bays divided by trusses that include a tie beam and raking struts, while the stable has two king post roof trusses. The remainder of the 19th-century range has tie beams with raking struts and a collar beam.
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