Stable And Kennel Block, Grangehill, Threep Wood Road, Beith is a Grade B listed building in the North Ayrshire local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 2 December 1980. 1 related planning application.
Stable And Kennel Block, Grangehill, Threep Wood Road, Beith
- WRENN ID
- brooding-chalk-crimson
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- North Ayrshire
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 2 December 1980
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
This is a stable and kennel block dating to 1868, situated on the Grangehill estate in Beith. It was later converted into a dwelling in the late 20th century. The building is a courtyard stable, exhibiting classical architectural details. It is a single-story structure with lofted areas. The exterior is constructed of squared and snecked stugged sandstone with dressed ashlar margins.
The main, or northwest, elevation features a three-centred rusticated carriage arch, now blocked, with a keystone dated 1868, set within a broad, entablatured surround topped with a pediment. Flanking bays are defined by a moulded string course, with outer gabled bays containing two round-arched, keyblocked windows on the ground floor and one window above. Paired apex stacks are present. A corniced eaves course runs along the top.
The rear, or southeast, elevation has a central gable with a three-centred carriage arch below it. There are three windows to the left, and two windows and one blocked opening to the right.
The inner courtyard features a central gable facing southeast, topped with a clock and weather vane. A three-centred carriage arch sits beneath, with further carriage arches on either side, later converted to doors. A carriage arch on the northwest side has been glazed; flanking later 20th-century canted bays are topped with dormers that break the eaves. Windows and doors are arranged irregularly on the other elevations, and the courtyard is surfaced with cobblestones.
The building's slate roof is graded grey, with some terracotta ridge tiles. Coped ashlar ridge and apex stacks are topped with moulded, classical-style square cans.
The interior retains some original stabling features, including stalls divided by decorative cast-iron grilles with a diaper pattern and cast-iron stall gates made in Belfast.
Grangehill is one of the principal estates in Beith, with a history beginning in 1557. It was inherited by John Fulton in 1785, and subsequently sold to Isaac Legg and then to William Patrick in 1858. His grand nephew, John Gavin Fullarton Patrick, likely commissioned the construction of the stables around 1861. The building is noted on maps of 1897 and 1910, with the latter identifying a kennel function.
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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