Kennels is a Grade II listed building in the Yorkshire Dales National Park local planning authority area, England. House. 1 related planning application.
Kennels
- WRENN ID
- patient-stair-bistre
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Yorkshire Dales National Park
- Country
- England
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
A house, dating from the 17th century with alterations in 1705. It is constructed of gritstone rubble with a graduated stone slate roof. The building is two storeys high and consists of three bays, with a low, two-storey porch extending from the first bay. Quoins are present. The porch has a 20th-century board door set within a square-headed, chamfered quoined surround. A plaque above the door, bearing the inscription "WAW 1705" in raised lettering, is covered by a hoodmould. A small, chamfered window sits above the door, and the gable is finished with bulbous kneelers and coping. A blocked 17th-century doorway in the right return has a large lintel cut to a shallow segmental arch. A small, chamfered window is located to the left. The other bays have recessed, chamfered mullion windows: four and three lights to the ground floor, each beneath a continuous drip-mould; and three and three lights set below the eaves. Corniced ridge stacks are positioned in line with the porch and between bays two and three. The blocked side entrance to the porch represents a 17th-century arrangement, similar to features found in other buildings in the area, such as Lainger House in Bordley and an outbuilding at Foxup in Halton Gill.
Detailed Attributes
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