Low Waupley Farmhouse And Adjoining Stable Ranges is a Grade II listed building in the North York Moors National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 February 1987. Farmhouse and stable ranges. 2 related planning applications.

Low Waupley Farmhouse And Adjoining Stable Ranges

WRENN ID
veiled-spindle-merlin
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North York Moors National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
27 February 1987
Type
Farmhouse and stable ranges
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Low Waupley Farmhouse is an 18th-century farmhouse, with a farm cottage from the early 18th century that is now integrated into the farmhouse, and mid-to-late 18th-century stable ranges attached to the sides. The farmhouse is constructed of dressed sandstone, while the cottage and the right-hand stable are of coursed rubble, and the left-hand stable is of random rubble with quoins. Gable ends and rear walls of the cottage are rendered. The roofs are covered in clay pantiles with stone ridge and gable copings, and block kneelers. A right-end stack has been rebuilt in brick.

The farmhouse and cottage present a two-storey, four-window front. A boarded door is set within a late 20th-century gabled trellis porch on the left side of the cottage. Mid-20th century casement windows fill original openings in the farmhouse and the first floor of the cottage. An enlarged ground-floor opening on the cottage contains a casement window. Keyed lintels are above ground-floor windows on the farmhouse. End and ridge stacks are present.

The single-storey stable ranges are attached at either end. The right-hand stable has a late 20th-century casement window. The cottage has a rear lean-to outshut with a catslide roof. Stable doors and boarded windows are in the rear wall of the stables. A mid-to-late 20th-century glass and timber porch adjoins the rear of the cottage. Other later additions, including a timber and corrugated steel shed attached to the right-hand stable and a mid-to-late 20th-century concrete-block outbuilding attached to the rear of the left-hand stable, are not considered to be of historical interest.

Detailed Attributes

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