Outbuildings Approximately Five Metres North Of Egton Manor House is a Grade II listed building in the North York Moors National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 7 July 1989. Stables, outbuildings.
Outbuildings Approximately Five Metres North Of Egton Manor House
- WRENN ID
- stark-rampart-dust
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North York Moors National Park
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 7 July 1989
- Type
- Stables, outbuildings
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The outbuildings, approximately five metres north of Egton Manor House, comprise stables, gunrooms, and carriage houses with lofts, which are now used as estate offices. The stable range dates to 1893, with extensions added in 1910 and 1913, commissioned for the Foster family. The stables are built of hammered sandstone, while the extensions are of herringbone-tooled sandstone with tooled dressings. All have slate roofs.
The stable range is a 1-storey, 5-bay structure, with a projecting 1-storey, 5-bay range at right angles, and a further 1-storey and attic, 5½-bay extension beyond. The stables feature a central 4-panel double door within a chamfered opening with a shaped lintel, flanked by similar doorways at each end. Pivoting 9-pane windows are positioned on either side of the central door. A gabled dormer in the centre above contains paired 4-pane sash windows with shaped sills on corbels and a cornice hood, topped by a louvred owlhole. A datestone above the central door reads "18 F 93". Octagonal ridge ventilators are visible to the left and right of the central gable. The left return has a round-arched, chamfered doorway and a tripartite window in the gable end, beneath a chamfered owlhole.
The projecting range has a 4-panel door with a 9-pane window to the left, and a 6-panel door between 4-pane sashes to the right; the door lintel is inscribed "JKF 1913". The right end gable wall features an octagonal window with crossed glazing bars. The extension range has a gabled bay with a wide, half-glazed 4-panel door flanked by narrow 8-pane sashes. Above the door is a tripartite window with a round-headed, radial-glazed centre window flanked by 8-pane sashes. A cornice date panel above the door incorporates a carved trophy and the date 1910. A board door is located beneath a plain lintel in the half-bay to the right. The remaining four bays contain board double doors with long lintels, recessed beneath blind round arches on imposts. Two centre bays are cross-gabled, with a round-headed, radial-glazed window beneath an owlhole in a moulded surround. Dated rainwater goods are present throughout. A ridge stack is situated to the right of the gabled end bay. All gables are coped, topped by ball and pedestal finials.
The rear elevation features small-paned pivoting windows on the ground floor and tripartite windows in the attic gables, similar to those on the front. Dated rainwater goods are also present. A right return includes an external staircase leading to a glazed entrance for the estate offices.
More on this building
Sign in or create a free account to unlock:
- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.