Barns Attached To Kilburn Hall On North is a Grade II listed building in the North York Moors National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 1 May 1952. Barn, outbuilding.
Barns Attached To Kilburn Hall On North
- WRENN ID
- tilted-cobble-hawk
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North York Moors National Park
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 1 May 1952
- Type
- Barn, outbuilding
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The barns attached to Kilburn Hall are located on the north side and date from the mid to late 17th century for the wing and from the late 18th to early 19th century for the barn. The buildings are constructed from coursed rubble and coursed square stone, featuring pantile and stone slate roofs. The structure has a T-shaped plan, with a two-bay barn projecting to the left from the gable end of the two-storey wing facing the road.
The wing includes a gable with quoins and a central triangular-headed doorway that is chamfered, featuring a 20th-century board door. Above this doorway is a two-light mullion window set above a deep lintel, with an inserted window to the left. On the first floor, there is a blocked one-light window to the left and a three-light window to the right, both of which are chamfered mullioned. The roof is covered with pantiles, and there is an inserted doorway at the front of the left return and a chamfered light at the rear.
The barn has inserted double doors under a wooden lintel on the left side and a quoined cart archway on the right, which features a keyed elliptical arch and old board and panelled doors. The roof of the barn is made of stone slate. The wing connects to Kilburn Hall through a narrow bay that has a chamfered plinth and an inserted 20th-century window.
At the rear of the wing, there is a later stone stair leading up to an inserted first-floor doorway, which obscures the central ground-floor doorway that has a double-chamfered light to the right. Above this, there are three chamfered windows on the first floor and another in the gable, with the two above the door being altered by the inserted doorway. The barn features an opposing cart archway. Inside, the wing retains some wide floorboards and has four 19th-century collared principal rafter roof trusses.
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