Agricultural Range at Ty-draw Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Vale of Glamorgan local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 15 January 1998. House.
Agricultural Range at Ty-draw Farm
- WRENN ID
- hallowed-fireplace-mist
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Vale of Glamorgan
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 15 January 1998
- Type
- House
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
The agricultural range at Ty-draw Farm is an E-plan structure dating back to the 17th century, with its arms running north to south. It is built from local rubble, featuring dressed stone quoins and cut freestone detailing. The eastern arm originally served as a barn, which includes a large, modernized threshing doorway on the left side and slit vents at two levels. To the right of this doorway, there is a blocked square-headed doorway, and further obscured by later stairs, a blocked doorway with a Tudor arch.
A stone stair with a parapet leads to the granary level. At ground floor level, there is a stone doorway with a four-centred head and "Glamorgan" stops, while at the upper level, there is another doorway with a four-centred head. Above this doorway, the gable features a damaged ball-finial, and the loft doorway has re-used ovolo-moulded timber jambs. To the right of the stair at the upper level, there is a camber-headed window, and on the ground floor, there is a camber-headed doorway and window, which were formerly two doorways.
The north gable end has an attic-level loading door and a blocked doorway at the middle level. The rear elevation of the barn features a large doorway with a later porch. To the south, there is an addition that includes pigeon holes in the south gable.
The long east-west transverse range consists of a two-storey central block with three windows, used for granary and food preparation, flanked by single-storey wings. The central and western north-south ranges, along with the barn range, form yards, with open sheds to the north supported by cast-iron columns.
The barn contains five bays with morticed collar trusses and trenched purlins. The northern extension includes a cowhouse with five heavy stop-chamfered joists that were originally plastered. The granary above also has re-used beams and formerly plastered joists. The loft, accessed by a wooden ladder-stair, features a single re-used roof truss with dove-tail and lap-jointed collar. The rest of the complex displays late 19th-century detailing, such as sawn king-post trusses.
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