Triggles, The Long Room And Art Studios, About 100 Metres North Of Leonard Wills Field Centre is a Grade II listed building in the Exmoor National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 May 1969. Art studio and private dwelling.

Triggles, The Long Room And Art Studios, About 100 Metres North Of Leonard Wills Field Centre

WRENN ID
gaunt-lancet-sage
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Exmoor National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
22 May 1969
Type
Art studio and private dwelling
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Triggles, The Long Room and Art Studios, located about 100 metres north of the Leonard Wills Field Centre, were originally stables built in 1792. At the time of the survey in October 1983, the building was undergoing renovation. The structure is rendered over brick with freestone dressing and features a hipped slate roof, gabled entrances, and brick stacks on the west front. It has a courtyard plan, with the original stables located on the south and east sides, a coach house on the north and northwest, and staff accommodation on the first floor of the south and southeast sides.

The south front is two stories tall, with a symmetrical arrangement of two, one, and two bays. It has 16-pane sash windows on the first floor flanking an unlit gabled central carriageway entrance. There is a string course on the ground floor to the right, with two inserted 20th-century segmental-headed sash windows in original arched recesses. To the left, there are late 18th-century thermal windows in arched recesses, and a date stone marked "IT" (for Sir John Trevelyan) from 1792 is located in the gable end.

Inside the courtyard, the west side is two stories with one bay, featuring a brick stack at the gable end, an oriel window supported on brackets, sash windows, a slate roof, and a slate-hung apron. The ground floor has segmental-headed tripartite sash windows, a plank door to the left, and a single-storey section to the right with two bays. The rest of the courtyard is single storey, with a gabled one-and-a-half-storey carriageway entrance on the north side flanked by pairs of double doors with arched heads. Some late 18th-century stable fittings remain, along with late 19th-century loose boxes and decorative arched openings. The east side is still in use, while the area to the left of the entrance (southwest) is derelict and in poor condition.

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