Long Lease Farmhouse and attached outbuildings is a Grade II listed building in the North York Moors National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 7 July 1989. Farmhouse. 2 related planning applications.

Long Lease Farmhouse and attached outbuildings

WRENN ID
rough-lintel-foxglove
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North York Moors National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
7 July 1989
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Long Lease Farmhouse and its attached outbuildings date from the early 18th century, with some parts possibly being older. The building was raised and extended in the late 18th century, and it has undergone alterations in the late 19th and 20th centuries. The farmhouse and outbuildings are constructed from squared sandstone, with the farmhouse raised in herringbone-tooled sandstone. The extension is made of red brick in English garden wall bond, featuring herringbone-tooled sandstone quoins. The roofs are covered with pantiles and have brick stacks.

The farmhouse is designed as a longhouse, extended to the right. The original high end has one and a half storeys and two windows, while the right extension has one and a half storeys with one window. The low end on the left has one and a half storeys and three bays, and there is a lower one-storey, one-bay extension further left. The high end features a 20th-century door inserted at the center, with small-pane windows to the left of the door and at the far left, both in chamfered surrounds. Other ground floor windows are 20th-century replacements, with the one to the right in a vestigial chamfered surround. The gabled and bargeboarded half dormers have four-pane sashes. The extension includes a large-pane tripartite ground floor window with a central sash, set beneath a segmental relieving arch, and a raking dormer with a three-light, large-pane horizontal sliding sash. The building has coped gables and shaped kneelers, with end and center right stacks. The low end features a 20th-century cross-passage door in its original opening, and a small-pane, tripartite window with a central sash to the left. Other openings are doors, with a coped left gable and shaped kneeler. The low end extension has a board stable door and a coped left gable with a plain kneeler.

Inside the house, there is an inglenook fireplace with a heck in the room to the right of the cross-passage. A boxed winder stair features a plank door on butterfly hinges.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2021
  • Related listed building consents — 2 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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