Agricultural Ranges of outbuildings at Badland Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Powys local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 15 February 1993. Agricultural outbuildings.
Agricultural Ranges of outbuildings at Badland Farm
- WRENN ID
- heavy-floor-pine
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Powys
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 15 February 1993
- Type
- Agricultural outbuildings
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
The Agricultural Ranges of outbuildings at Badland Farm date from the 19th century and consist of a single-storey, 8-bay cowhouse featuring a central feeding passage, a bull box at the south end, and a two-storey feed store along with a preparation block at the north end. The east and west wings contain south-facing open-fronted cowsheds with a feeding passage. The end bay of the east wing includes a trap house and a pony stable, while the end bay of the west wing features a feed preparation area and an enclosed sheep dipping tank.
To the north-west of the main range is a two-storey wing that houses a granary above a 4-bay open-fronted cartshed and a 2-bay enclosed implement shed. To the north-east is a single-storey range that includes working horse stables, loose boxes, a chaff pen, a tack room, three pigsties, and a lane for geese and ducks. At the northern end of the main range is a two-storey combination barn and shearing shed, which has opposing full-height double doors and low sheep doors. There are also three detached hay barns nearby, which are not original but likely date from the late 19th century.
The buildings have a uniform appearance, constructed from red brick in English bond, with openings featuring cambered lintels. The yards are enclosed by brick walls topped with glazed ridge cappings and pyramid stone cappings on the gate piers. The roofs are hipped and covered with slate. The central range has louvred ridge ventilators with leaded pyramidal caps. The open-fronted sheds are supported by timber posts set on concrete pads, with stop-chamfered horizontal wallplate brackets. The doors are boarded with pierced ventilation strips above, and the windows consist of 3-light glazed upper sections above slatted timber sections. The cart shed openings feature cambered header arches over an impost band and brick piers.
Inside, the buildings retain original stall partitions and ties, feeding racks with beaded plank backs and stop-chamfered baluster stays, as well as brick mangers. The roof structure includes bolted king post trusses with projecting tie-beam ends and raking braces.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
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- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
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