Walhampton Arms, formerly farm building range at Home Farm. is a Grade II listed building in the New Forest National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 May 1987. Former farm building. 7 related planning applications.

Walhampton Arms, formerly farm building range at Home Farm.

WRENN ID
hollow-lead-holly
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
New Forest National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
13 May 1987
Type
Former farm building
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The Walhampton Arms, originally a farm building range at Home Farm, dates from around 1900 and may have been built in the late 19th century by N Shaw. It was converted in 1984. The structure is constructed of brick with timber, featuring pargetted and tile-hung gables, and has a plain tile roof. It is a single-storey building, approximately 6 by 5 bays, forming a quadrangle along the roadside, with an L-shaped wing extending from the far corner, which is now Home Farmhouse, and is attached to an older range at the rear.

The roadside elevation includes a gable from the taller range on the right side, supported by four buttresses at the eaves. In the center, there is a window that starts as a 2 by 3 pane window below the eaves and continues as a wide 2 by 5 pane window in the gable, flanked by pargetting and tile-hanging above. To the left, the eight-bay lower center section has buttresses between the bays, with the six central bays featuring small three-light casements under the eaves, and the rightmost bay has a door. The left end has a wider bay with a small central buttress beneath a narrow brick gable, which has a three-pane window under the eaves and a five-pane window above with tile-hanging on the gable's sides. The roof is hipped around the left end.

On the right side of the wing, there is a gabled timber porch supported by moulded posts on brick walls in the second bay, with three-light casements in the bays on either side. Below the eaves level, there is a recessed gable archway of brick with stepped buttresses on either side. Above this, a timber lintel with arched braces and pargetting is present, along with a tile-hung gable featuring a two-light casement. At the ridge, there is a dovecote with a tented lead roof, and the far bays have double doors.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • No sale records on file
  • Related listed building consents — 7 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Arcade Incorporating Grotto Immediately West of Walhampton House Grade II 99 m
  2. Walhampton House Walhampton School Grade II* 150 m
  3. Wall and Gatepiers Around Courtyard in Front of Walhampton House Grade II 157 m
  4. Sundial Immediately South East of Walhampton House Grade II 169 m
  5. Little Ashton Grade II 429 m
  6. Vienna Cottage Grade II 727 m
  7. Burard-Neale Monument Grade II* 731 m
  8. Southlands School Grade II 893 m
  9. Gilpins Grade II 903 m
  10. The Wheatsheaf Public House Grade II 950 m