New Barn Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 March 1987. Farmhouse.

New Barn Farm

WRENN ID
lunar-hall-myrtle
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cotswold
Country
England
Date first listed
25 March 1987
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

New Barn Farm is a detached farmhouse that dates from the mid 17th century to the early 18th century, with further additions made in the early to mid 19th century. The building is constructed from coursed squared and dressed limestone, topped with a slate roof. It features both 20th-century and 17th to early 18th-century ashlar stacks. The farmhouse has an 'L'-shaped main body, with the 17th-century range located to the right of the entrance front.

The entrance front is two storeys high with an attic and has a symmetrical, four-bay layout. It includes two 2-storey canted bays, each fitted with 12-pane sash windows that have keystone surrounds. The central entrance consists of part-glazed doors set back within a panelled reveal, with a 12-pane sash window above. To the right, there is a part-glazed door from the 19th century, featuring marginal glazing bars, and a boot-scraper positioned to the right of the entrance.

The front of the farmhouse, which faces the road, has three windows symmetrically arranged. There are sixteen-pane sashes on either side of a tripartite 16-pane sash on the first floor, and sixteen-pane sashes on the ground floor as well. The ground floor also has double part-glazed doors, with a rectangular hall light above that has glazing bars forming a geometric pattern.

The 17th-century range is two storeys high with an attic, illuminated by 2-light roof dormers. The ground floor features one double-chamfered 2-light stone-mullioned casement and one 3-light stone-mullioned casement. There are garage doors within a segmental-headed opening to the right, and a two-light double-chamfered stone-mullioned casement at the upper left. A single row of pigeon holes is located below the eaves to the right, with traces of a now-blocked opening interrupting this row. The main body of the farmhouse has a hipped roof, while the gable end of the 17th-century range features flat coping and has gable-end and axial stacks. The interior has not been inspected.

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