Barremman is a Grade B listed building in the Argyll and Bute local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 14 May 1971. Farmhouse, steading, stable, coach house. 1 related planning application.
Barremman
- WRENN ID
- worn-bracket-lark
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- Argyll and Bute
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 14 May 1971
- Type
- Farmhouse, steading, stable, coach house
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
Barremman is a farmhouse dated 1730, featuring a two-storey, three-bay rectangular plan. The exterior is finished with white-painted harl and has steeply pitched crowstepped gables. The windows are positioned directly under the eaves and have raised cills on the north elevation.
On the south elevation, there are three bays with a central door at ground level, which now has a modern lean-to porch with a corrugated plastic sheeting roof. Above the modern glazed door is a marriage lintel inscribed with the names Patrick Cuming and Mary McFarlane, dated 1730. A narrow window is located above the porch, flanked by symmetrical bays. To the outer left, there is a square slate-hung dormer, and to the outer right, there are two closely spaced rooflights.
The north elevation is asymmetrical, featuring a window at the centre on the first floor. There is a three-bay single-storey lean-to outshot with a door on the right return, a window at ground level to the outer right, and a rooflight at the centre.
The farmhouse has four-pane sash and case windows, a grey slate roof, and a rendered corniced apex stack on the east gable with octagonal cans. The west gable has a coped stack with circular cans.
To the south of the farmhouse is an L-plan steading, constructed of whitewashed rubble with a piended slate roof, lead flashings, and modern lead ventilators. The east elevation features two boarded sliding doors symmetrically arranged, along with three cast-iron rooflights. The north elevation has two narrow doors symmetrically placed, with the left door featuring wire meshing and a narrow fanlight above.
Adjacent to the farmhouse is a two-storey, six-bay stable and coach house block to the west. This rectangular-plan structure has exposed rubble with harl, cement pointing, and sandstone margins and dressings. The first floor has three symmetrically arranged windows with raised cills. There are three segmental-headed coach arches to the right of centre, with the outer right arch being narrower; these have boarded doors with glazed upper panels. To the left of centre, there are two doors and a window, with the doors being boarded and featuring letterbox fanlights, while the window has boarded shutters.
The stable and coach house also has a grey slate roof, lead flashings, modern ventilators, and rooflights, along with rendered, coped apex stacks and sandstone margins and dressings.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- Related listed building consents — 1 application
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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