Torbay Council
Listed building outline
Reference | Name | Listed building | Geometry | Description | Notes | Organisation | Uprns | Entry date | Start date | End date |
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383909 | 155, WINNER STREET | 1298225 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.571840 50.436594,-3.571863 50.436522,-3.571793 50.436516,-3.571771 50.436568,-3.571645 50.436554,-3.571638 50.436601,-3.571840 50.436594))) | Shop with accommodation over. c1830s. Rendered; gabled slate roof; right-end stack with brick shaft. L-plan, the main block double-depth with a rear left service wing with a separate entrance. 3 storeys. Asymmetrical 2-window front. Flagged passageway to left with recessed doorway with a blocked overlight. C20 shopfront to right with a plate glass window canted in to the right towards a C20 plate-glass door with overlight. 2 first-floor 2-pane sashes; 2 second-floor early C19 sixteen-pane sashes. INTERIOR: Ground floor of front block gutted for C20 shop. Remainder not inspected but may retain features of interest. HISTORY: Winner Street was the main medieval thoroughfare in Paignton, named after the bishops' vineyard. Listing NGR: SX8848160820 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
383910 | 159 AND 161, WINNER STREET | 1208561 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.571670 50.436755,-3.571754 50.436747,-3.571752 50.436735,-3.571837 50.436731,-3.571840 50.436679,-3.571781 50.436680,-3.571778 50.436668,-3.571650 50.436678,-3.571670 50.436755))) | House, now in use as shop with accommodation over and house. Probably C18 or earlier, with c1830s alterations. Stuccoed and blocked out, said to be timber-framed construction above first-loor level ; gabled slate roof; right end stack with stone rubble shaft. PLAN: L-plan, the main block double-depth with an unheated rear wing. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys. Asymmetrical 2-window front. Ground floor has C20 shopfront to left with plateglass window canted in towards glazed door with overlight to right. Recessed C20 front door to No.161, 2-pane sash to ground floor right. Two 2 over 2-pane first-floor sashes at slightly different heights; two 2nd floor 2-light casements. INTERIOR: Ground floor of No.159 inspected, altered for shop use. No access to No.161 at time of survey but it is said to have been used as a commercial bakery at one time with bakehouse with ovens surviving. HISTORY: Winner Street was the main medieval thoroughfare in Paignton, named after the bishops' vineyard. Listing NGR: SX8848060831 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
383911 | 163, WINNER STREET | 1195222 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.571752 50.436735,-3.571754 50.436747,-3.571670 50.436755,-3.571694 50.436816,-3.571778 50.436801,-3.571765 50.436770,-3.571797 50.436764,-3.571789 50.436742,-3.571778 50.436733,-3.571752 50.436735))) | House, Probably late C18. Rendered; slate roof gabled at ends; end stacks, right end with a brick shaft. PLAN: Double-depth, 2-rooms-wide with a (secondary) cartway to the right. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys. Largely symmetrical 3-window front. Ground floor has central 6-panel front door with a blocked overlight, cartway to the right. Windows 16-pane late C18/early C19 sashes with blind recesses on the first and second floors in the centre. INTERIOR: Not inspected but cartway, said to have been built in association with the bakery business carried on at No.161 (qv), includes a red sandstone fireplace dating from its use as a domestic room. Other features of interest may survive elsewhere in the house. HISTORY: Winner Street was the main medieval thoroughfare in Paignton, named after the bishops' vineyard. Listing NGR: SX8847760838 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
383912 | 165, WINNER STREET | 1208568 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.571694 50.436816,-3.571738 50.436914,-3.571805 50.436902,-3.571761 50.436804,-3.571694 50.436816))) | House, now shop with accomodation over. Probably late C18/early C19. Stuccoed with some traces of blocking out; asbestos slate roof hipped at left end; stack with rendered shaft. PLAN: Double-depth, 2-rooms-wide. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys. 3-window front, formerly 4. Ridge of roof curves down from right to left. Ground floor left has 16-pane sash; early C20 shopfront with left and right pilasters with incised key moulding, entablature and cornice, C20 door to left of centre, blocked doorway alongside. Shop front with central 2-leaf door flanked by 12-pane windows. 3 first-floor 16-pane sashes, blind recess in 2nd bay from the left. 3 second-floor 4 over 8-pane sashes, blind recess in second bay from left. INTERIOR: Partially inspected; shop interior modern, other features of interest may survive elsewhere in the house. HISTORY: Winner Street was the main medieval thoroughfare in Paignton, named after the bishops' vineyard. Listing NGR: SX8847960847 | 1993-10-25 | 1993-10-25 | ||||
383913 | 22 AND 22A, WINNER HILL ROAD, 169 AND 171, WINNER STREET | 1195223 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.571738 50.436914,-3.571785 50.436993,-3.571816 50.437017,-3.571858 50.437008,-3.571807 50.436902,-3.571738 50.436914))) | Includes: Nos.22 AND 22A WINNER HILL ROAD. House, now shop with accommodation over and to rear. Probably late C18/early C19. Roughcast; slate roof hipped at left end; stack with rendered shaft with platband. PLAN: Double-depth, 2-rooms-wide. Built into the slope of Winner Hill Road with rear entrances at first-floor level. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys and cellar, 2 storeys to Winner Hill Road. 3-window front. c1900 shopfront to left with a panelled pilaster at the left end and a 3-light shop windows with louvred overlights canted in towards shop door. To the right, a C20 door with overlight and, at the far right end, a second shop window with 3 lights. First and 2nd floors each have three 12-pane sashes. INTERIOR: Partially inspected; shop interior modern, other features of interest may survive elsewhere in the house. HISTORY: Winner Street was the main medieval thoroughfare in Paignton, named after the bishops' vineyard. Listing NGR: SX8847460864 | 1993-10-25 | 1993-10-25 | ||||
383915 | Higher Yalberton Farmhouse And Attached Outbuilding To East | 1298226 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.600857 50.420064,-3.600857 50.420109,-3.601019 50.420109,-3.601198 50.420120,-3.601213 50.420015,-3.601031 50.420004,-3.601026 50.420031,-3.600940 50.420032,-3.600939 50.420004,-3.600801 50.420005,-3.600809 50.420023,-3.600857 50.420064))) | Farmhouse and outbuilding. Mid C19. House rendered; hipped slate roof; stacks with rendered shafts with platbands, right-hand stack with corbelled band. Local stone rubble outbuilding with corrugated-iron roof. PLAN: Farmhouse faces N onto the road, outbuilding adjoins at E end. Double-depth plan house with central entrance. Outbuilding angles out at left end. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Symmetrical 3-bay front to house with central enclosed pilastered porch with entablature and moulded cornice; C20 glazed door with glazed side panels. C19 twelve-pane sashes. Rear elevation has rear porch; one C19 twelve-pane sash and 3 first-floor plastic sash windows probably in original embrasures. Outbuilding has eaves carried out as pentice on stout timbers. Elevation to road has door at right end with evidence that it is in blocking of larger cartway entrance, small loading door to left. Left (E) return has a loft loading door and 3 windows. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX8632958983 | 1993-10-25 | 1993-10-25 | ||||
383916 | Barn, Linhay And Stable South Of Higher Yalberton Farmhouse | 1208582 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.601089 50.419986,-3.601136 50.419943,-3.601069 50.419915,-3.601205 50.419783,-3.601074 50.419730,-3.600944 50.419863,-3.600880 50.419836,-3.600806 50.419912,-3.600924 50.419962,-3.600994 50.419971,-3.601012 50.419954,-3.601089 50.419986))) | Multi-purpose farmbuilding comprising barn, linhay and stables. c1850s, probably contemporary with the farmhouse (qv). Local stone rubble; roof of barn/linhay of very small slates; stable with Roman tiled roof. PLAN: L plan. Sited behind and at a slight angle to the farmhouse. The barn incorporates a linhay on the N side; the stables project to the S. EXTERIOR: Barn/linhay with gabled slate roof. N side consists of 2 cylindrical piers with the remains of another and a solid wall section at the right (W) with a blocked window and low opening at ground level. The right return has double doors to the ground floor and a loft door clad with corrugated-iron. The lofted stable has a lower roof line and roof hipped at the S end. The W side has 2 partly-blocked shouldered doorways and one loft door. Steps up to loft doorway on left (North) return are covered by a pent roof partly attached to the end of the barn. INTERIOR not inspected. An interesting multi-purpose farmbuilding, close to the listed farmhouse. Listing NGR: SX8636359008 | 1993-10-25 | 1993-10-25 | ||||
383917 | Cider Barn At Higher Yalberton Farm | 1195224 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.598471 50.420149,-3.598903 50.420201,-3.598921 50.420151,-3.598884 50.420146,-3.598896 50.420109,-3.598616 50.420073,-3.598621 50.420058,-3.598515 50.420050,-3.598507 50.420118,-3.598478 50.420115,-3.598471 50.420149))) | Cider barn belonging to Higher Yalberton Farmhouse, Yalbarton Road, (qv). Early C19. Local grey limestone rubble; corrugated-iron roof half hipped at W end. PLAN: L-plan building with a long range for storing cider barrels and a cross-wing at the east end to accommodate the machinery, now worked off a tractor which operates in an outshut at the E end. Apple juice is delivered from the press into a tank under the floor, sited in the wing. The slope of the land allows loft level access to the wing from the orchard to the S for tipping apples into the press. Rear outshut, (entirely clad with corrugated-iron) to the storage section, incoporating extra storage for barrels and tanks. EXTERIOR: Main block lofted, wing single-storey to accommodate the height of the press. Long 4-window N front. The wing, to the E, is slightly broken forward with wide paired doors under a timber lintel. The main block has regular fenstration of 4 ground and 4 first-floor 2-light timber mullioned windows with bead-moulded mullions, diagonally-set iron stanchions and internal shutters. Ground-floor windows have red breccia voissoirs, first-floor windows have timber lintels. The right end has paired doors below a loft door, the left end has has a large, low window into the tractor outshut. INTERIOR: The lofted storage section is divided into aisles with bays by timber posts which are notched to support longitudinal timbers. Lower tier of barrels sit on longitudinal timbers, second tier propped with short pieces of wood. Loft contains more barrels. 13 collar rafter pegged roof trusses. The wing, with 4 similar trusses, contains the press. Apples are put into a hopper from a platform from the S door. The apples are pressed in layers divided by coarse material. HISTORY: The barn serves 6 orchards. Paignton was well-known for cider production in the early C19. Yalberton and Higher Yalberton Farms, both producing cider, are the chief survivals of this industry. This purpose-built cider barn is of especial local interest, but is also a rare survival in Devon, both larger and more mechanised than usual. Listing NGR: SX8652559029 | 1993-10-25 | 1993-10-25 | ||||
383918 | King William Cottage | 1293055 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.597496 50.420229,-3.597529 50.420232,-3.597521 50.420272,-3.597788 50.420289,-3.597801 50.420215,-3.597502 50.420196,-3.597496 50.420229))) | House. Early C17 or earlier origin; c1690s high-quality remodelling; thoroughly repaired after dereliction in the 1980s. MATERIALS: Roughcast; roof gabled at ends, thatched to front of ridge, slated to rear; stacks with tall rebuilt stone rubble shafts. PLAN: 3-room and passage plan, with stairs rising to rear of passage, which is to right of centre, rear outshuts. Left-hand room heated from left end stack, centre room and right-hand room heated from rear lateral stacks, unusual arrangement of separate, diagonally-set stack to heat first floor room right. The arrangement of the rooms is unusual, with a dining-room/parlour at the left end, a parlour at the right end and apparently a hall or kitchen in the centre. The attic was evidently used for accommodation at one time, although the stair to the attic no longer exists. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 5-window front. Recessed 6-panel front door with lead drip ledge. All windows C20 timber 3-light casements with glazing bars except the right-hand pair which has C18 two-light 12-pane sashes. Right return has a C17 two-light ovolo-moulded mullioned window at attic level. INTERIOR: Paved passage (left-hand partition moved late 1980s). The kitchen, in the centre, has a complete pitched stone floor; open fireplace with rough stone lintel and sandstone jambs. Good c1700 panelled door with horizontal panel to parlour, at left end. This has a plain fireplace with rounded corner and timber lintel. Decorative moulded plaster oval of c1700 on ceiling, central rose temporarily removed. Pretty timber display cupboard with panelled doors and shell back is also of the same date. Right-hand room has original shutters and a late C18 panelled door with a matching cupboard door on the end wall. Stair with stick balusters and a ramped pine handrail. First-floor ceiling removed in left-hand room. Roof: Remains of side-pegged jointed cruck roof, crucks intact to front of ridge, left-hand end re-roofed following a collapse. Listing NGR: SX8659659043 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
383919 | Yalberton Farmhouse | 1298227 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.600428 50.420076,-3.600558 50.420156,-3.600629 50.420108,-3.600743 50.420054,-3.600683 50.419999,-3.600600 50.420039,-3.600569 50.420022,-3.600554 50.420033,-3.600517 50.420011,-3.600428 50.420076))) | Farmhouse, divided into two. c1550-1600, roof raised c1700; extended and re-windowed c1800. MATERIALS: Cob on stone rubble footings, partly roughcast, partly stuccoed and blocked out; roof mostly thatched, some slate at the left end; stacks with rendered and brick shafts. PLAN: Single-depth main block, facing north, left (east) end with rear left wing, east end and wing under M-plan roof. Original arrangement was a 2- or 3-room and cross-passage plan, passage to right of centre, entrance on the S side, lower end room and hall heated by lateral stacks on the N side, stair projection on S wall of hall. The roof was raised c1700, leaving the remains of one cruck truss over the hall. There may have been an inner room but the evidence for this has been obscured by a one-room plan extension or thorough rebuilding of the main block at the left (east) end with a slate roof and a new entrance on the N side into a cross passage. The inner room and rear wing are now in separate occupation. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Thatched roof hipped at ends over centre and right end; slate gabled roof to left. The front wall angles out to right of the front door, indicating a secondary phase and the front elevation is stuccoed and blocked out under the slate roof. N side has asymmetrical 6-window front with 2 massive lateral shouldered stacks with set offs, right-hand stack with truncated shaft. Early C19 entrance to right of centre with 6-panel door with deep overlight and cornice on carved consoles. At the right end, an archway gives into a farm building with a domestic room over. C19 French window with margin panes to ground floor left, 12-pane horned sash to right of door. Small window with internal shutter to right of hall stack, segmental-headed archway to right. 5 first-floor 12-pane sashes, 3 without horns and with old glass; 4-pane fixed window above archway at right end. Rear elevation has steps up to plank door to old cross passage and shallow stair projection alongside to the right, with small 4-pane stair window. Eaves thatch eyebrowed over 2 first-floor C19 or early C20 timber casement windows with glazing bars, one similar ground-floor window, one C20 iron-framed casement to ground floor right. INTERIOR: Main block only inspected. Of the late C16 phase a plank and muntin screen with chamfered stopped headbeam survives to left of the old cross passage. The hall retains one stop-chamfered cross beam, exposed joists in the lower end room to the west. Hall fireplace blocked at present, but may preserve early lintel and jambs; lower end room fireplace also blocked. Truncated cruck truss, cut off above the mortised collar, visible in roofspace, the cruck visible in one first floor room. The existing roof is probably late C17 with pegged A-frames with butt collars. Surviving historic joinery includes a c1700 door with horizontal panels and original hinges to the lower end room, similar door to one bedroom; 2-panel door to the bottom of the stair. C18 cupboard with fielded panels and cornice (doors missing) to one first-floor room. Extensive survival of old plaster. The present owner remembers a partial pitched stone floor in the hall. An attractive vernacular South Hams building, very unaltered internally and externally. In September 1999 the entry was amended. The current entry is below:SX85NE PAIGNTON YALBERTON ROAD, (South side) Higher Yalberton 1947-1/3/180 Yalberton Farmhouse 10.1.75 GV II Farmhouse, divided into two. c1550-1600, roof raised c1700; extended and re-windowed c1800. MA TERIALS: Cob on stone rubble footings, partly roughcast, partly stuccoed and blocked out; roof mostly thatched, some slate at the left (east) end; stacks with rendered and brick shafts. PLAN: Single-depth main block, facing north, left (east) end with rear left wing, east end and wing under M-plan slate roof. Original arrangement was a 2- or 3-room and cross-passage plan, passage to right of centre, entrance now on the S side, lower end room and hall heated by lateral stacks on the N side, stair projection on S wall of hall. The roof was raised c1700, leaving the remains of one cruck truss over the hall ( only visible in first-floor room to front) .There may have been an 1nner room but the evidence for this has been obscured by a one-room plan extension or thorough rebuilding of the main block at the left (east) end with a slate roof and a new entrance on the N side into a cross passage. The inner room and rear wing are now in separate occupation (not inspected). EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Thatched roof hipped at ends over centre and right end; slate gabled roof to left. The front wall angles out to left of the front door, indicating a secondary phase and the front elevation is stuccoed and blocked out under the slate roof of the eastern extension. The cob front elevation of the main block has been re-clad in rough stone and stuccoed; a subsidiary slate extension to the roof. N side has asymmetrical 6-window front with 2 massive lateral shouldered stacks with set offs, right-hand stack with truncated shaft at eaves level with slate extension roof over. Early C19 entrance to left of centre with 6-panel door with deep overlight and cornice on carved consoles. At the right end, an archway gives into a farm building with a domestic room over. C19 French window with margin panes to ground floor left, 12-pane horned sash to right of door. Small window with internal shutter to right of hall stack (now blocked by pierced zinc screen), segmental-headed archway to right. S first-floor 12-pane sashes, 3 without horns and with old glass; 4-pane fixed window above archway at right end. Rear elevation has steps up to plank door to old cross passage and shallow stair projection alongside to the right, with small 4-pane stair window. Eaves thatch eyebrowed over 2 first-floor C19 or early C20 timber casement windows with glazing bars, one similar ground-floor window, one C20 iron-framed casement to ground floor right. INTERIOR: Main block only inspected. Of the late C16 phase a plank and muntin screen with chamfered stopped headbeam survives to left of the old cross passage (with traces of polychrome paint under a wash): the passage is terminated bya C19 plank screen, the room space beyond retaining its flagstone floor and blocked at the front (north) side except for the small window with internar shutter sealed by the external zinc screen. The hall retains one stop-chamfered cross beam, exposed joists in the lower end room to the west. Hall fireplace blocked at present, but may preserve early lintel and jambs and flanked by blocked wide-splayed window to its left and wide-splay window to its right with some panelling. Lower end room fireplace also blocked; exposed joists replaced after fire by oak replacements in 1998. Truncated cruck truss, cut off above the mortised collar, across position of through purlin, visible in roofspace, the cruck visible in one first-floor room on north (front) side, west of hall stack and partitioned from it. The existing thatched roof is probably late C17 (possibly C18) with eleven pegged A-frames with butt collars, one with a tie beam into which are pegged uprights for partition below; the cruck sits centrally within a bay, no A-frame is attached to it. Ceiling above hall is lower than that to west. Each slope supports 8-9 purlins/thatching battens notched into the frames. Elsewhere the front elevation has been stepped out, the lower 2 purlins on each frame have been removed and a subsidiary rafter, or sprocket, attached to the top surface of the frame beneath the thatch. The easternmost bay of the roof space is roofed in slate and accommodates a second A-frame with rafters above principal purlins. An internal gable-chimney stack divides the main block internally from the extension; 2 A-frame frames to the eastern end gable lie beyond (not accessible). Surviving historic joinery includes a c1700 door with horizontal panels and | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
383920 | Barn Immediately To South West Of Yalberton Farmhouse | 1293061 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.600489 50.419753,-3.600561 50.419810,-3.600546 50.419821,-3.600616 50.419867,-3.600607 50.419875,-3.600683 50.420000,-3.600743 50.420054,-3.600809 50.420023,-3.600736 50.419856,-3.600522 50.419730,-3.600489 50.419753)),((-3.600457 50.419879,-3.600521 50.419966,-3.600598 50.419943,-3.600533 50.419855,-3.600457 50.419879))) | Barn. Probably late C18 in origin, with extensive patching and remodelling. Partly cob on stone rubble footings, partly stone rubble; corrugated-iron roof (formerly thatched). PLAN: Roofed on a NS axis, built down a slope from N to S and adjoining the Yalberton Farmhouse (qv) at right-angles. The western first-floor room of the house is built over the N end of the barn. EXTERIOR: Lofted. The E elevation faces onto the farmyard at what is now the rear (south) of the farmhouse. Long 3-window front with a pair of barn doors in the centre; loft loading door to the right, 12-pane sash (probably originating from the farmhouse) to the left. The left end has more cob and a small doorway and one ground and one loft window, all with timber lintels. The entrance from the lane to the N, under one room of the house, is at loft level inside the barn. INTERIOR: Partially inspected. Pegged collar rafter roof trusses of a late C18 character. Group value with a good vernacular farmhouse. Listing NGR: SX8638459007 | 1993-10-25 | 1993-10-25 | ||||
390450 | The Fish Quay, Torquay Harbour | 1202953 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.526373 50.460176,-3.526398 50.460176,-3.526429 50.460133,-3.526573 50.459875,-3.526458 50.459837,-3.526215 50.459780,-3.526121 50.459774,-3.526121 50.459788,-3.526066 50.459800,-3.526034 50.459820,-3.526028 50.459834,-3.526052 50.459874,-3.526086 50.459907,-3.526091 50.459971,-3.526111 50.459973,-3.526113 50.460121,-3.526133 50.460120,-3.526373 50.460176))) | Fish Quay. Part of the harbour improvements carried out 1803-1806 for Sir Lawrence Palk initially to the designs of Rennie but completed under the direction of Dr Henry Beake, a national authority on financial matters (Pevsner). Local grey limestone rubble. The Fish Quay projects south from the North Quay (qv). HISTORY: Russell quotes from Beake's correspondence with the Palk solicitor, in which he was critical of Rennie's design and work: badly planned, shamefully executed, with no proper super-intendence and no regard to the expense; but with great possible care to make it as neat as possible to the eye with a useless waste of labour. (Percy Russell: A History of Torquay: Torquay: 1960-: P.74-77; The Buildings of England: Cherry B: Devon: London: 1989-: P.854). Listing NGR: SX9175863352 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390451 | Halden Pier, Torquay Harbour | 1202954 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.525309 50.457680,-3.527198 50.457290,-3.527904 50.457154,-3.528368 50.457278,-3.528856 50.457283,-3.528927 50.457250,-3.528926 50.457222,-3.528908 50.457179,-3.528504 50.457188,-3.527811 50.457020,-3.525233 50.457550,-3.525309 50.457680))) | Pier. 1867. Engineer JP Margery, contractor, James Mountstephen, patron, Sir Lawrence Palk. Local grey limestone rubble a good deal of the material found by the lowering of Beacon Hill (Russell). An outer pier or breakwater, about 300m long, giving the old harbour extra protection and creating a large, outer harbour. Built at a cost of nearly »70,000. An important component of the C19 harbour at Torquay. (Percy Russell: A History of Torquay: Torquay: 1960-: 140). Listing NGR: SX9169863046 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390452 | South Pier Including Former Barking Oven, Torquay Harbour | 1202955 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.525187 50.459176,-3.525195 50.459188,-3.525226 50.459184,-3.526233 50.459389,-3.526244 50.459382,-3.526314 50.459393,-3.526301 50.459420,-3.526343 50.459435,-3.526446 50.459437,-3.526500 50.459414,-3.526516 50.459389,-3.526515 50.459339,-3.526477 50.459309,-3.526444 50.459296,-3.526459 50.459248,-3.525452 50.459052,-3.525317 50.459019,-3.525187 50.459176))) | South Pier. Part of the harbour improvements carried out 1803-1806 for Sir Lawrence Palk initially to the designs of Rennie but completed under the direction of Dr Henry Beake, a national authority on financial matters (Pevsner). Local grey limestone rubble. The South Pier projects east from Victoria Parade. HISTORY: Russell quotes from Beake's correspondence with the Palk solicitor, in which he was critical of Rennie's design and work: badly planned, shamefully executed, with no proper super-intendence and no regard to the expense; but with great possible care to make it as neat as possible to the eye with a useless waste of labour. (Percy Russell: A History of Torquay: Torquay: 1960-: 74-77; The Buildings of England: Cherry B: Devon: London: 1989-: 854). Listing NGR: SX9177763273 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390453 | The Falcon Public House | 1202956 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.528896 50.465662,-3.528969 50.465423,-3.528970 50.465413,-3.528884 50.465403,-3.528815 50.465652,-3.528896 50.465662))) | Public house. Late 1850s/early 1860s. Plastered; steeply-pitched slate roof; left-end stack with brick shaft and old pots; cast-iron downpipe. PLAN: Double-depth plan, 1-room wide with entrance into passage to right. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 2-window front. Stout Doric porch with entablature to right; 6-panel front door. Large segmental-headed window to bar on left with a moulded architrave, glazed with a 2-pane sash. 2 first-floor 2-pane hornless sashes. A statue of a falcon on a plinth projects through the roof on the front. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9158863978 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390454 | No 50 Including Gate Piers | 1202957 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.529963 50.465416,-3.530031 50.465340,-3.529976 50.465321,-3.530027 50.465295,-3.530023 50.465280,-3.530014 50.465277,-3.530022 50.465268,-3.530079 50.465286,-3.530096 50.465265,-3.530000 50.465232,-3.529868 50.465382,-3.529963 50.465416))) | Terraced house. c1840. Plastered; slate roof; stack with rendered shaft. Double-depth plan, entrance to right. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and attic. Asymmetrical 2-bay front. Deep eaves on brackets; moulded eaves cornice. Fine doorway with 6-panel front door with glazed panels either side flanked by reeded pilasters. Panels have geometric intersecting glazing bars. Segmental-headed fanlight across door and panels with radial and elliptical glazing bars. French window with margin panes and overlight to the left. Verandah across ground floor with geometric trellis uprights and fascia and a tent roof covered in roof felt in imitation of fish-scale slates. 2 first floor C19 12-pane sashes; two C20 flat-roofed attic dormers. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9151263959 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390455 | 52, ABBEY ROAD | 1202958 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.529963 50.465416,-3.530015 50.465436,-3.530006 50.465447,-3.530030 50.465455,-3.530168 50.465302,-3.530125 50.465286,-3.530119 50.465293,-3.530106 50.465289,-3.530097 50.465301,-3.530122 50.465308,-3.530079 50.465356,-3.530031 50.465340,-3.529963 50.465416))) | Terraced house. c1840. Plastered; slate roof. Double-depth plan with entrance to right. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 2-bay front with a platband. Heavy Ionic porch to right with 6-panel front door with overlight. Windows with moulded architraves, key blocks and sill blocks, glazed with clate C19 two-pane sashes. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9150563962 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390456 | 70 AND 72, ABBEY ROAD | 1281909 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.530850 50.465757,-3.530932 50.465682,-3.530943 50.465686,-3.530953 50.465676,-3.530944 50.465671,-3.530997 50.465620,-3.531010 50.465625,-3.531029 50.465607,-3.531016 50.465601,-3.531050 50.465568,-3.531008 50.465513,-3.530882 50.465636,-3.530867 50.465629,-3.530902 50.465595,-3.530801 50.465549,-3.530751 50.465607,-3.530788 50.465623,-3.530777 50.465633,-3.530787 50.465638,-3.530724 50.465703,-3.530850 50.465757))) | Pair of semi-detached houses. Early/mid C19. Rendered walls with slate roofs and rendered end stacks. Double-depth plan with entries to returns. 2 storeys; 2-window front. 6/6-pane first-floor sashes and ground-floor French windows. Returns with similar sashes. Original verandah replaced since 1975 listing. INTERIOR remodelled in late C20. Listing NGR: SX9144863992 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390457 | Presbytery Adjoining Church Of The Assumption Of Our Lady | 1202959 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.531810 50.466052,-3.531852 50.466015,-3.531870 50.466024,-3.531894 50.466005,-3.531874 50.465995,-3.531899 50.465975,-3.531862 50.465956,-3.531884 50.465939,-3.531804 50.465896,-3.531690 50.465988,-3.531810 50.466052))) | Presbytery. 1857, by J Hansom, who was the architect of the church. Local grey limestone rubble with freestone dressings; stacks with stone shafts. PLAN: Part of group with the Church (qv) and school (qv), Abbey Road. Asymmetrical plan. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 2-window front, the right-hand bay slightly broken forward and gabled to the front. 2 ground floor 2-light windows with stone architraves and shouldered heads. First-floor window right also 2-light with a stone architrave but with a crank-arched head. Single-storey porch adjoins right return with a shoulder-headed stone doorway. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9138264027 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390458 | 85, ABBEY ROAD | 1281910 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.531365 50.466477,-3.531374 50.466469,-3.531414 50.466487,-3.531511 50.466403,-3.531405 50.466353,-3.531306 50.466438,-3.531348 50.466457,-3.531340 50.466465,-3.531365 50.466477))) | Detached house, now hotel. c1850. Stuccoed and blocked out; slate roof, gabled at ends; lateral stacks with rendered shafts, 2 to each side. Italianate style. PLAN: End on to the road; double-depth; entrance on right return. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys. Symmetrical 2-bay front. Pedimented gable to the front with a moulded cornice and oculus. Platbands between floors; bays divided by pilasters. 12-pane horned second and first floor sashes; ground floor sashes 6 over 9-panes. 4-bay verandah across front with a lapped glass roof on iron columns with trellis panels in front. Verandah returns round right side; one window to each return. INTERIOR: Not inspected. Listing NGR: SX9141064076 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390459 | Portland Terrace | 1202960 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.533942 50.467540,-3.533964 50.467556,-3.534015 50.467528,-3.534030 50.467540,-3.534017 50.467547,-3.534040 50.467564,-3.533994 50.467590,-3.534014 50.467604,-3.534073 50.467572,-3.534088 50.467583,-3.534071 50.467592,-3.534095 50.467610,-3.534111 50.467601,-3.534146 50.467627,-3.534128 50.467637,-3.534151 50.467653,-3.534169 50.467643,-3.534204 50.467670,-3.534189 50.467679,-3.534210 50.467694,-3.534198 50.467701,-3.534211 50.467711,-3.534238 50.467696,-3.534255 50.467710,-3.534242 50.467718,-3.534279 50.467746,-3.534293 50.467738,-3.534315 50.467754,-3.534303 50.467761,-3.534326 50.467778,-3.534307 50.467789,-3.534322 50.467800,-3.534354 50.467783,-3.534372 50.467797,-3.534358 50.467805,-3.534383 50.467822,-3.534395 50.467815,-3.534487 50.467883,-3.534560 50.467844,-3.534535 50.467826,-3.534577 50.467803,-3.534105 50.467451,-3.533942 50.467540))) | Terrace of 8 houses. c1840. Stuccoed with traces of blocking out; slate roofs, gabled at right end (No.115), hipped at left end (No.129); stacks with rendered shafts with platbands. PLAN: Double-depth plan, one room wide, front doors to left. Piano nobile. Each house has a rear closet projection and small rear yard. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys and basement. Each front 2 bays, divided by pilasters rising from first floor platband. Second-floor sill band; eaves band. Round-headed doorway to left with plain fanlight and rusticated vermiculated quoins of the Exeter, Southernhay type; some variations to doorways. Original doors 4-panel. Original windows 12-pane sash to ground floor; 6 over 9-pane to first floor with floating cornices on consoles; 3 over 6-pane to second floor. First-floor windows have balconies (some replaced) of 2 different types: Nos 125 & 127 have columnar verticals; No.119 has anthemia. No.129 has a symmetrical front to the main facade with a 2-storey entrance block set back at the left end with a doorway with a shallow doorcase with pilasters and an entablature. Rear elevations have tall stair windows, No.115 with margin panes. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9119564238 | 1972-02-14 | 1972-02-14 | ||||
390460 | Portland Terrace | 1279659 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.534517 50.467867,-3.534549 50.467891,-3.534498 50.467918,-3.534618 50.468008,-3.534665 50.467982,-3.534697 50.468006,-3.534737 50.467983,-3.534704 50.467959,-3.534751 50.467934,-3.534632 50.467845,-3.534592 50.467868,-3.534560 50.467844,-3.534517 50.467867))) | Pair of houses making up the left end of Portland Terrace. c1840. Plastered; slate roof; stacks with rendered shafts, 2 to each side. PLAN: Double-depth, mirror-plan pair of houses with entrance blocks to left and right; piano nobile. EXTERIOR: 3 storeys and basement. 2-storey entrance blocks. Symmetrical 4-bay front plus one-bay entrance blocks. Bays recessed between pilaster strips; platbands. Ground-floor windows 12-pane sashes; first floor windows 6 over 9-pane; second-floor windows 3 over 6-pane. First floor windows have pretty cast-iron balconies with fleur-de-lis finials. Entrance blocks have eaves brackets; 3 over 6-pane sashes and doorways with plain architraves. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9119064249 | 1972-02-14 | 1972-02-14 | ||||
390461 | Church Of The Assumption Of Our Lady | 1279634 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.532029 50.466312,-3.532099 50.466257,-3.532122 50.466260,-3.532117 50.466241,-3.532180 50.466185,-3.532131 50.466158,-3.532137 50.466153,-3.532123 50.466154,-3.532080 50.466132,-3.532086 50.466127,-3.532071 50.466127,-3.532029 50.466106,-3.532035 50.466101,-3.532029 50.466097,-3.532023 50.466102,-3.531992 50.466086,-3.532030 50.466056,-3.531907 50.465994,-3.531858 50.466034,-3.531916 50.466064,-3.531883 50.466091,-3.531863 50.466080,-3.531808 50.466123,-3.531791 50.466115,-3.531790 50.466106,-3.531773 50.466106,-3.531775 50.466119,-3.531737 50.466150,-3.531721 50.466152,-3.531724 50.466160,-3.531738 50.466158,-3.531824 50.466202,-3.531817 50.466208,-3.531828 50.466214,-3.531833 50.466210,-3.531873 50.466230,-3.531866 50.466235,-3.531876 50.466240,-3.531883 50.466235,-3.531921 50.466254,-3.531914 50.466259,-3.531927 50.466266,-3.531933 50.466260,-3.531974 50.466281,-3.531968 50.466286,-3.531978 50.466291,-3.531984 50.466286,-3.532029 50.466312))) | Roman Catholic church. 1853, by J Hansom, aisle and Lady Chapel added 1858. Local grey limestone rubble with freestone dressings; slate roofs. Decorated style. PLAN: Part of a complex including a schoolroom and presbytery, Abbey Road (qqv). Nave; chancel; north and south transepts; north and south aisles; north-west porch. EXTERIOR: Chancel lower than nave; gabled bellcote at junction. North side has 3 windows to the chancel. Buttressed transept with 3-light window with trefoil-headed lights, then 2 aisle bays, gabled to the north with buttresses with battered set-offs and gables. Bay to west with a lean-to roof. Gabled porch in westernmost bay with a chamfered arched doorway, coped gable and statue niche. West end has a central buttress flanked by one-light traceried windows with a traceried sherical triangle above. 4 gables to the south elevation. INTERIOR: Roofs partly boxed-in with plasterboard, chancel fittings and font late C20, otherwise much of Hansom's interior survives, although the carved work, which is high quality, has been sprayed silver and most of the painted decoration covered in white paint. 4-bay nave with W end gallery containing organ. NE Lady chapel. SE end used as baptistry. 3-bay N & S arcades differ from one another - W bay has low triple arcade into W ends of aisles. N arcade has polished Italian columns and moulded capitals; double-chamfered arches. Lean-to roof with timber trusses, stone arch into transept. S aisle has different polished marble shafts, the 2 easternmost columns clustered. S aisle roof divided into separate bays with transverse members with hammerbeam detail. Moulded chancel arch on short marble shafts with Early English capitals, springing from carved heads. Arcades from chancel into Lady Chapel and Baptistry, Baptistry abuts chancel oddly with 2 arcades parallel to one another and a sort of mini-aisle in timber posts. Lady chapel has C19 stone carved (painted) brattished reredos divided into bays by slender marble shafts. Stone altar table on 3 shafts with Early English capitals. Baptistry has boarded keeled wagon roof preserving C19 painted decoration. C20 pulpit incorporates carved figure panel that may have come from C19 reredos. Beaten copper Stations of the Cross on the S aisle wall. Most of the nave benches C19. Remarkable wall monument in round-headed niche on S aisle wall. Naturalistic white marble head of the Virgin above inscription to Edward Melchior Jean Marie, Prince de Polignac, composer of music, 1834-1901. STAINED GLASS: E window by Hardman, 1860s, with the fading peculiar to the firm's windows of this date. Fine set of late C19 Hardman windows in the S aisle including one to Henry Cary with a portrait figure of Cary on a bier at the base. Hardman windows showing Marian symbols in side wall of the Lady chapel and in the E window. (The Buildings of England: Cherry B: Devon: London: 1989-: P.851). Listing NGR: SX9137664048 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390462 | School Associated With The Church Of The Assumption Of Our Lady | 1202961 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.532235 50.466369,-3.532288 50.466327,-3.532279 50.466323,-3.532307 50.466298,-3.532275 50.466281,-3.532314 50.466251,-3.532328 50.466258,-3.532345 50.466244,-3.532331 50.466237,-3.532419 50.466168,-3.532352 50.466133,-3.532118 50.466312,-3.532161 50.466334,-3.532144 50.466347,-3.532171 50.466361,-3.532189 50.466347,-3.532235 50.466369))) | School. 1857 (foundation stone), to the designs of J Hansom. Local grey limestone rubble with freestone dressings; slate roof; stacks with stone shafts, some old octagonal shafts. PLAN: Part of a group including a church and presbytery. T-plan. EXTERIOR: 2-storey block at NE; schoolroom at SW end. The 2-storey block has a 3-window to NE end, with a small gable to the front at the right and a hipped roof porch entered on the right return via a shouldered doorway. Porch has shouldered windows with stone architraves. Paired shouldered window to left; small first floor 2-light window above porch. Under the gable a tall window, converted to a glazed door in the C20. Left return of 2-storey block has paired and triple-shouldered windows. The schoolroom, to the left, has a 4-window front with triple, shouldered windows. 2-storey porch block to the right with a shouldered doorway flanked by one-light windows and a pair of chamfered lancets above. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9134864059 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390463 | Avonleigh | 1207657 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.508097 50.464626,-3.508018 50.464600,-3.508013 50.464606,-3.507977 50.464594,-3.507964 50.464608,-3.507905 50.464593,-3.507948 50.464525,-3.507866 50.464511,-3.507854 50.464541,-3.507898 50.464548,-3.507902 50.464572,-3.507891 50.464588,-3.507791 50.464558,-3.507742 50.464619,-3.507763 50.464626,-3.507752 50.464638,-3.507849 50.464672,-3.507841 50.464683,-3.507989 50.464731,-3.507995 50.464723,-3.508018 50.464722,-3.508028 50.464709,-3.508014 50.464698,-3.508021 50.464690,-3.508010 50.464686,-3.508014 50.464679,-3.508044 50.464688,-3.508065 50.464661,-3.508037 50.464652,-3.508046 50.464642,-3.508076 50.464651,-3.508097 50.464626))) | Villa, still in use as a house. Probably late 1860s with c1890s added bays on the garden elevations, late C20 renovations. Stuccoed and blocked out; hipped slate roof; stacks with rendered shafts with platbands. PLAN: Large rectangular plan to main block with stair rising at right-angles to the entrance hall, service wing to right of entrance front is in same ownership but separate occupation. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and cellar. Deep eaves on paired brackets, pilasters, eaves band, moulded string; platband. Windows glazed with 4-pane sashes with horizontal glazing bars. Asymmetrical 3-window entrance front plus 1-window wing to right (this has been extended). Main block has rusticated quoins. Centre porch bay broken forward with hipped slate roof with finial. Shallow projecting porch with ball finials and round-headed doorway with plain overlight and 4-panel front door. Paired round-headed windows above with plain proud architraves. To left of porch is projecting stack and one first-floor sash window with moulded architrave; one ground- and one first-floor sash to right of porch, similar sashes to service wing to right. Rebuilt conservatory on front to left of porch. Garden elevations in the same style with the addition of ground-floor projecting bays, either canted or square with dentil cornices and parapets. The 3-window rear garden elevation has one ground floor tripartite sash with a dentil frieze and cornice on consoles, perhaps the form of the pre-bay windows, and one round-headed window with a moulded architrave and keyblock. INTERIOR: Very intact, the plan largely unaltered on ground and first floors; original joinery, including doors and skirtings, good plaster ceiling friezes, and mostly original chimneypieces with tiled insets. Pretty tiling to porch. Stair has turned balusters and newels. Good example of a middle-sized Torquay Villa with a very intact interior. Listing NGR: SX9307363845 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390464 | Gate Piers And Garden Walls To West Of Avonleigh | 1281911 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.508445 50.464690,-3.508322 50.464625,-3.508283 50.464588,-3.508244 50.464522,-3.508215 50.464408,-3.508244 50.464397,-3.508266 50.464333,-3.508260 50.464333,-3.508238 50.464395,-3.508208 50.464406,-3.508229 50.464507,-3.508278 50.464589,-3.508316 50.464627,-3.508339 50.464644,-3.508445 50.464690))) | Gate piers and garden walls. Late 1860s, contemporary with Avonleigh (qv). Garden walls local grey limestone rubble; rendered gate piers. Walls enclose a large garden on the Acadia Road side of Avonleigh. Square section gate piers have plain bases and oversailing moulded caps with square moulded tops. Included for group value. Listing NGR: SX9305063834 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390465 | Erith House | 1207668 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.509183 50.464450,-3.509434 50.464355,-3.509428 50.464348,-3.509436 50.464333,-3.509419 50.464314,-3.509394 50.464313,-3.509386 50.464304,-3.509338 50.464321,-3.509242 50.464208,-3.509234 50.464211,-3.509201 50.464175,-3.509244 50.464159,-3.509198 50.464108,-3.508950 50.464200,-3.508974 50.464237,-3.508980 50.464234,-3.508998 50.464253,-3.509035 50.464239,-3.509065 50.464272,-3.509047 50.464278,-3.509127 50.464365,-3.509144 50.464359,-3.509171 50.464388,-3.509137 50.464401,-3.509147 50.464412,-3.509140 50.464415,-3.509183 50.464450))) | House, built as a convalescent home. 1861 by JW Rowell and still in use by the same Trust. Local grey limestone rubble with red brick dressings; gabled slate roofs with crested ridge tiles; stacks with stone shafts with cornices. Gothic Revival style. PLAN: Overall H-plan with a double-depth main block with an axial corridor and crosswings at both ends. Porch projection on E side with stair hall alongside to N. EXTERIOR: Very complete. Almost symmetrical 5-bay entrance front with coped gables to the crosswings. Centre 2 bays slightly broken forward and gabled to the front with gabletted roofs with cusped bargeboards and a corbelled stack between with multiple shafts. Deep eaves on moulded corbels. Polychromatic brick bands rise above the main windows, which are stone, glazed with plate glass sashes with horizontal glazing bars. Left (N) crosswing has a freestone canted bay on the ground floor with hipped slate roof and tall lancet windows with blind quatrefoils in the spandrels; triple lancet to first floor above. Right crosswing has a pair of tall lancets on the ground floor and a pair of crank-headed lancets above with a quatrefoil window in the centre. Other windows are arranged in pairs and threes and have chamfered stone lintels. Entrance front in the same style has a projecting 3-storey porch with a double-chamfered crank-arched doorway and original timber door. Gabled stair projection to N of porch has cusped bargeboards and a large mullioned and transomed 3-light window with trefoil-headed lights and a brick super-ordinate arch. INTERIOR: Very complete with original joinery, chimey-pieces and an open well stair with vaulted ceiling. An interesting building type in a good state of preservation, and a robust design by a noteworthy local architect. Listing NGR: SX9298463811 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390466 | Gosforth | 1202962 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.508621 50.465417,-3.508597 50.465372,-3.508586 50.465375,-3.508582 50.465368,-3.508594 50.465365,-3.508578 50.465337,-3.508567 50.465340,-3.508561 50.465329,-3.508510 50.465341,-3.508506 50.465333,-3.508458 50.465344,-3.508462 50.465352,-3.508333 50.465380,-3.508344 50.465400,-3.508307 50.465408,-3.508317 50.465427,-3.508354 50.465419,-3.508380 50.465465,-3.508621 50.465417))) | Villa, divided into flats. c1870s. Local grey limestone rubble with slate roof and stuccoed dressings; stacks with rendered panelled shafts and dentil cornices. Italianate style. PLAN: Double-depth main block, facing south with service block at west end. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Deep eaves on paired moulded brackets; eaves band; corner pilasters; moulded sill band; moulded string at first floor level. 1:3-window north front, facing onto Babbacombe Road, with the service wing to the left. Windows with stuccoed architraves, moulded to the main block, mostly glazed with 4-pane sashes with horizontal glazing bars. Shallow projecting stack to right of centre with round-headed panels and shaft projecting through eaves. Eared surround to first floor window left in main block; one first floor window converted to door. Right return of main block is gabled to the front on the left with a 2-storey canted bay. Entrance elevation with rectangular and canted bays; gabled over canted bay; round-headed doorway. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9303463929 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390467 | Craig Court Hotel | 1207679 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.530603 50.469814,-3.530556 50.469855,-3.530569 50.469862,-3.530531 50.469891,-3.530640 50.469949,-3.530644 50.469976,-3.530679 50.469995,-3.530793 50.469908,-3.530742 50.469881,-3.530754 50.469871,-3.530683 50.469833,-3.530680 50.469817,-3.530659 50.469806,-3.530638 50.469808,-3.530621 50.469800,-3.530603 50.469814))) | Shown as Esdaile on OS map. Villa. c1850s. Plastered; slate roof; stacks with rendered shafts with moulded cornices. Italianate style. PLAN: Main block rectangular double-depth plan, west-facing, with an entrance on the south return. Set-back service wing adjoins at left (north) end. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 2:2 window front plus conservatory at the right end. Main block with deep eaves, eaves band, rusticated quoins and moulded string at second floor sill level. 2 first-floor tripartite 2 over 2-pane sashes, with horizontal glazing bars and Venetian shutters. Ground-floor window left similarly glazed but with moulded architrave. Late C19 canted bay to right with moulded architrave and 2-pane windows. 3-bay verandah across front with timber posts with brackets supporting a lead roof. 2-window front to wing to left with eaves band, platband and sash windows with horizontal glazing bars. Conservatory to right has segmental leaded 3-light ribbon windows and good late C19 iron cresting on the ridge. On the south side a flat-roofed porch with a parapet and sunk mouldings. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9146964466 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390468 | 22, ASH HILL ROAD | 1281912 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.531170 50.470642,-3.531200 50.470637,-3.531161 50.470521,-3.531110 50.470530,-3.531116 50.470547,-3.531088 50.470551,-3.531068 50.470542,-3.531042 50.470546,-3.531033 50.470559,-3.531005 50.470563,-3.531000 50.470545,-3.530940 50.470553,-3.530956 50.470599,-3.530997 50.470612,-3.531015 50.470664,-3.531170 50.470642))) | Villa. c1840s. Plastered; slate hipped roof; stacks with rendered shafts with moulded cornices or platbands. PLAN: Approximately rectangular on plan with 2-storey projecting entrance block on east side. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. One-window east front with deep eaves and eaves band. Entrance projection with hipped roof. Recessed half-glazed front door with plain overlight below floating cornice, all in a shallow retangular recess. 3 sash windows over doorway, also in a shallow recess, glazed with sashes with horizontal glazing bars. Conservatory mentioned in 1975 list description replaced with flat-roofed single-storey block. 3-bay verandah on south side. Description only approximate as access unobtainable at time of survey. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9144264543 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390541 | 23, CASTLE ROAD | 1208311 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.528748 50.469357,-3.528814 50.469304,-3.528660 50.469229,-3.528595 50.469283,-3.528748 50.469357))) | Terraced house. c1870s. Plastered; slate roof with sprocketed eaves; stacks with rendered shafts with cornices. PLAN: Double-depth, single-fronted plan. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and attic Asymmetrical 2-window front with platband. Front door to right with 6 vertical panels and plain proud architrave with plain fanlight. Tripartite window to left with proud architrave, glazed with 4-pane sashes with horizontal glazing bars. 2 similarly-glazed first-floor windows with proud architraves. 2 large segmental-headed attic dormers glazed with segmental-headed 2-pane sashes. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9160964393 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390542 | 25, CASTLE ROAD | 1280080 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.528689 50.469416,-3.528756 50.469361,-3.528637 50.469303,-3.528609 50.469327,-3.528567 50.469306,-3.528536 50.469332,-3.528577 50.469352,-3.528570 50.469357,-3.528689 50.469416))) | End house in a terrace. c1870s. Plastered; slate roof with sprocketed eaves; stacks with rendered shafts with cornices. PLAN: Double-depth plan entered on the outer (left) return and broken forward from the other houses in the terraces. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and attic Left and right pilasters; platband. Symmetrical 2-bay front: 2 ground and 2 first floor windows with moulded architraves, glazed with 4-pane sashes with horizontal glazing bars. Pair of segmental-headed attic dormers, glazed with segmental-headed 2-pane sashes. Left return with C20 porch addition but appears to have round-headed doorway with keyblock. Large round-headed first-floor stair window with moulded, pilastered architrave and keyblock, glazed with 3 over 2-pane sash with margin panes and coloured glass. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9161464398 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390543 | Gate Piers And Railings To Nos 15 To 25 | 1293224 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.528730 50.469413,-3.528735 50.469417,-3.529109 50.469105,-3.529101 50.469102,-3.528730 50.469413))) | Gate piers and railings to Nos 15-25 (odd). c1870s. Stuccoed and cast-iron. Gate piers and railings of 2 different styles. Nos 15 and 17 have more elaborate railings to the basement areas, fixed in an ovolo-moulded plinth with vase-shaped standards. The other houses have more conventional iron railings. Included for group value. Listing NGR: SX9159564392 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390544 | St Michael'S Chapel | 1206749 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.547166 50.475371,-3.547322 50.475375,-3.547326 50.475315,-3.547296 50.475314,-3.547299 50.475286,-3.547284 50.475285,-3.547282 50.475314,-3.547261 50.475313,-3.547262 50.475286,-3.547247 50.475285,-3.547246 50.475313,-3.547168 50.475310,-3.547166 50.475371))) | Anglican chapel (disused). Probably C13 or C14. Local grey limestone rubble with some red sandstone dressings; stone slate roof. PLAN: Small aisleless chapel, spectacularly sited above the sheer side of Chapel Hill. Doorway on south side. EXTERIOR: Very plain. The east end has a segmental-headed window opening (unglazed). One slit window on the south side, which has a segmental-headed arched doorway with red sandstone voussoirs and the stub walls of a former porch. North side windowless. West end wall thicker to the bottom with a slit window in the gable end wall. Impressively massive stone slate roof. INTERIOR: The floor is uneven bedrock. Stone pointed-barrel vaulted roof. A medieval chapel about which little is recorded. Suggested date tentative. Unusual roof construction for the region. The interior was scaffolded at time of survey. Listing NGR: SX9030865093 | 1952-11-20 | 1952-11-20 | ||||
390545 | Lavender Cottage | 1293188 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.536155 50.495460,-3.536283 50.495470,-3.536293 50.495432,-3.536249 50.495419,-3.536261 50.495343,-3.536298 50.495353,-3.536308 50.495337,-3.536278 50.495328,-3.536186 50.495323,-3.536155 50.495460))) | House. Late C18/early C19. Roughcast cob; thatched roof, gabled at ends. Chimneyshafts not seen on survey. PLAN: Single-depth plan, 4 rooms wide. Entrance into room to right of centre, stair rising from what is now the rear wall. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 4-window front with front door to right of centre with an early C19 door with hollow-chamfered coverstrips and studs. 4 first-floor and 4 ground-floor early C20 3-light casements, 3 panes per light. The right return has a probably Edwardian oriel window with a dentil cornice, glazed with high transomed casements. INTERIOR: Joists of slender scantling designed to take plaster; boxed in stair; probably C18 wide floorboards. Roof: Feet of trusses visible on first floor suggest 'A'-frame trusses. House was 2 cottages in 1975. Listing NGR: SX9113567302 | 1952-11-20 | 1952-11-20 | ||||
390546 | The Hermitage | 1206750 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.525575 50.482943,-3.525648 50.482905,-3.525441 50.482824,-3.525372 50.482890,-3.525317 50.482867,-3.525276 50.482907,-3.525311 50.482923,-3.525302 50.482933,-3.525378 50.482962,-3.525421 50.482921,-3.525433 50.482925,-3.525425 50.482935,-3.525449 50.482943,-3.525468 50.482941,-3.525502 50.482917,-3.525575 50.482943))) | House. 1830s. Plastered; slate gabled roof; stacks have rendered shafts with cornices. PLAN: Main block one-room wide, rear service wing at right angles with secondary service wing alongside. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Symmetrical 3-bay garden front plus one window single storey wing to left. Deep eaves. 3 ground-floor French windows with margin panes, the centre one a mid C20 copy. 2 outer 12-pane first floor sashes with cast iron balconies with anthernion decoration: balconies with secondary timber brackets with roundels. Round-headed centre first floor window, possibly converted form a niche. Single-storey block to left has a parapet and one French window. Lean-to conservatory with lapped glass to the right. Interior: Includes original joinery. In an important position, close to the church. Listing NGR: SX9186365902 | 1994-05-02 | 1994-05-02 | ||||
390547 | Cary Castle | 1293194 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.529500 50.483303,-3.529493 50.483294,-3.529502 50.483291,-3.529499 50.483283,-3.529488 50.483286,-3.529424 50.483194,-3.529433 50.483190,-3.529416 50.483179,-3.529405 50.483181,-3.529409 50.483188,-3.529264 50.483229,-3.529260 50.483223,-3.529246 50.483239,-3.529161 50.483263,-3.529147 50.483262,-3.529124 50.483229,-3.528881 50.483300,-3.528902 50.483338,-3.529023 50.483426,-3.529067 50.483403,-3.528998 50.483350,-3.529082 50.483326,-3.529107 50.483359,-3.529122 50.483356,-3.529151 50.483399,-3.529138 50.483403,-3.529130 50.483391,-3.529052 50.483425,-3.529096 50.483455,-3.529250 50.483411,-3.529221 50.483354,-3.529248 50.483346,-3.529260 50.483364,-3.529288 50.483372,-3.529299 50.483368,-3.529295 50.483363,-3.529354 50.483347,-3.529366 50.483364,-3.529385 50.483367,-3.529397 50.483364,-3.529392 50.483357,-3.529447 50.483349,-3.529448 50.483333,-3.529438 50.483336,-3.529425 50.483317,-3.529483 50.483300,-3.529488 50.483307,-3.529500 50.483303))) | Large villa, used for holiday flats. Late 1840s/early 1850s with late C20 additions. Plastered; roof concealed behind parapets; stacks with rendered shafts with embattled, corbelled caps, some with octagonal shafts. Picturesque Gothic style. PLAN: Double-depth plan, the original block north-facing with east service wings that have been developed and extended. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. 4-stage entrance tower. Embattled parapets; angle buttresses with battered set-offs and gabled finials. High-transomed, moulded, mullioned casement windows, those on the front elevation with hoodmoulds with carved label stops. 3-bay entrance front, the projecting tower in the centre with buttresses to the lower 2 stages and pilaster strips above. Moulded Tudor-arched outer doorway with Gothick panelled door with fanlight. Upper stages of tower decorated with blind traceried friezes between the pilaster strips. Embattled parapet with corbel table and embattled pinnacles. To right, a shallow projecting stack with embattled cap. 2 windows to left, 3 to tower. Other original elevations in a similar style with 2- and 3-light windows and embattled parapets, some rising in the centre. INTERIOR: Not seen in detail but noted as having original plasterwork, joinery and original stair. Listing NGR: SX9160465951 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390548 | 15, CHURCH STREET | 1280081 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.539523 50.468751,-3.539606 50.468708,-3.539563 50.468671,-3.539515 50.468659,-3.539501 50.468672,-3.539496 50.468668,-3.539460 50.468685,-3.539439 50.468668,-3.539429 50.468673,-3.539523 50.468751))) | House at end of terrace. Mid C19. Roughcast; gabled slate roof with remains of crested ridge tiles; stack with rendered shaft with platband. PLAN: Single-depth main range, 2 rooms wide, with a central entrance. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Symmetrical 3-window front has a round-headed doorway with panelled reveals; C20 front door with fanlight with spoke glazing bars. 2 first floor and 2 ground-floor flush-frame sashes. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9084264342 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390549 | 17, 19 AND 21, CHURCH STREET | 1208353 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.539503 50.468775,-3.539492 50.468767,-3.539523 50.468751,-3.539395 50.468644,-3.539302 50.468689,-3.539428 50.468800,-3.539472 50.468777,-3.539483 50.468786,-3.539503 50.468775))) | Terraced house. Mid C19. Plastered; slate roof, gabled at ends; brick stacks with brick shafts with cornices. PLAN: Single-depth main range, 2 rooms wide with central entrance. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. 1:3-bay front, the 3 bays symmetrical. C20 glazed, gabled porch, the outer door half-glazed with margin panes. 2 ground and 3 first-floor flush-frame 12-pane sashes. First floor has 2 over 4-pane sash above cartway shared with No.39 (qv) in centre of terrace. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may contain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9084864341 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390550 | 37 AND 39, CHURCH STREET | 1206751 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.539406 50.468811,-3.539332 50.468746,-3.539312 50.468717,-3.539270 50.468729,-3.539303 50.468751,-3.539270 50.468775,-3.539253 50.468771,-3.539256 50.468765,-3.539210 50.468732,-3.539180 50.468747,-3.539315 50.468858,-3.539406 50.468811))) | Terraced house. Mid C19. Stuccoed and blocked out; slate roof, gabled at ends; stacks with brick shafts with platbands. PLAN: Single-depth main range with a central entrance. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Symmetrical 3-window front. Round-headed doorway has 6-panel front door with plain fanlight. 2 ground floor and 3 first-floor 12-pane sashes. To the right, the first floor projects over a cartway shared with No.17 (qv) in the centre of the terrace. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may contain features of interest. Listing NGR: SX9085464351 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390551 | 41, CHURCH STREET | 1293206 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.539315 50.468858,-3.539237 50.468794,-3.539209 50.468808,-3.539169 50.468775,-3.539158 50.468780,-3.539149 50.468772,-3.539128 50.468782,-3.539258 50.468888,-3.539315 50.468858))) | Terraced house. Rendered; gabled slate roof; stack has rendered shaft with platband. PLAN: Single-depth main block. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Asymmetrical 2-window front, buttress on front to left. Round-headed doorway to left has fanlight with spoke glazing bars. Ground-floor window right and 2 first-floor windows, originally sashes but unfortunately reglazed with C20 plate glass windows but respecting original embrasures. Square-headed passage entrance to left. INTERIOR: Not inspected but may retain features of interest. Included for group value. Listing NGR: SX9086164356 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390552 | Cockington Almshouses | 1280082 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.561033 50.464474,-3.560960 50.464486,-3.560628 50.464537,-3.560657 50.464613,-3.561132 50.464539,-3.561101 50.464464,-3.561033 50.464474))) | Row of 7 almshouses. Built in 1840 by the Mallock family on the site of older almshouses built c1620 by Sir George Cary, according to a plaque. Stone rubble with some brick dressings; stone rubble chimneyshafts; slate roof. PLAN: Row of 7 almshouses facing south. Because of the slope, the eastern 3 almshouses are stepped down at a lower level than the western four. Each has 1-room plan, with integral rear lean-to service rooms, stacks in rear walls between main room and service outshut. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Each cottage has similar 1-window front of plain C19 or C20 replacement 2-light casements with glazing bars and, to left, the front door contains a plain plank door. Some of the timber lintels are still protected by hung slates. Continuous roof steps down right of centre and has low half hips both ends. INTERIORS: Not inspected. HISTORY: These almshouses, according to a wooden plaque fixed to the west end wall (by the lane), were established for Aged and Deserving residents of Cockington and Chelston. The almshouses form part of a group of exceptionally attractive listed buildings in the unspoilt village and the adjoining Cockington Park. Listing NGR: SX8931463909 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390553 | Court Cottages | 1208375 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.558780 50.464172,-3.558888 50.464244,-3.558870 50.464257,-3.558967 50.464324,-3.559015 50.464293,-3.559026 50.464264,-3.558906 50.464188,-3.559002 50.464121,-3.559097 50.464037,-3.559015 50.463995,-3.558780 50.464172))) | Formerly known as: Cockington Trust and Estate Office COCKINGTON LANE Cockington. House, converted to house and shop. c1700 with C20 alterations. Plastered stone rubble and cob; thatched roof with a plain ridge, half hipped at ends; 2 projecting front lateral stacks with stone shafts; right end stack. PLAN: Built into the slope of the land. Long single depth 3-room plan, the left end room probably converted from an agricultural building or cider house (cobbled floor and drain found during renovations). EXTERIOR: Picturesque. 2 storeys. Long asymmetrical 5-window front (4 first floor windows); C20 stone rubble buttresses. Eaves thatch eyebrowed over right-hand window and swept down at left end. Approximately central C20 two-leaf small-pane glazed front door. Alongside to the right, a projecting lateral stack with bread oven and an adjoining projecting windowed bay. Second doorway to right of centre. Good set (6 in all) of c1700 high-transomed 2-light mullioned windows, moulded on the inner face, glazed with square leaded panes, some preserving original window furniture; other windows small 2-light casements. Left return (part of the present shop) has a large, 3-light window with square leaded panes. INTERIOR: Plain carpentry detail; some c1700 2-panel doors. Roof: A-frames with lap-jointed collars of a c1700 character, extended at both ends of the range. Part of a group of exceptionally attractive listed buildings in an unspoilt village. Listing NGR: SX8944763853 | 1952-11-20 | 1952-11-20 | ||||
390554 | Shippon Approximately 10 Metres West Of Home Farmhouse | 1206752 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.557850 50.462790,-3.558062 50.462821,-3.558083 50.462760,-3.557871 50.462730,-3.557850 50.462790))) | Shippon. Late C19. Stone rubble with brick dressings; gable-ended Roman tile roof. PLAN: Shippon faces north onto the farmyard and was originally open-fronted. EXTERIOR: Single storey. Front is now blocked with C20 concrete blocks under weatherboarded timber-framing. It contains a central doorway with flanking long windows. INTERIOR: Has C20 fittings and a 7-bay roof of king post trusses. The shippon and other buildings of the farmyard form part of an exceptionally attractive group of listed buildings in an unspoilt villge and the adjoining Cockington Park. Included for group value. Listing NGR: SX8951963711 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390555 | Home Farmhouse | 1208419 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.557535 50.462876,-3.557565 50.462872,-3.557590 50.462880,-3.557714 50.462866,-3.557700 50.462823,-3.557641 50.462831,-3.557605 50.462731,-3.557522 50.462742,-3.557556 50.462843,-3.557525 50.462847,-3.557535 50.462876))) | Formerly known as: Manor Farmhouse COCKINGTON LANE Cockington. Farmhouse. Early C17 with various later alterations. Plastered cob on stone rubble footings (exposed to rear); stone rubble chimneyshaft raised with brick; asbestos tile roof with crested ridge tiles, formerly thatched. PLAN: L-plan farmhouse. Main block faces roughly west, is built across the hillslope and terraced into it at the rear. It has a 2-room plan with stairhall between. Larger northern room has large projecting rear lateral stack. Second stair in lower northern service crosswing which contains former dairy. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys with attics in main block. Tall building with irregular 2-window front, mostly C20 casements but also an early C17 4-light oak window with chamfered mullions. Front doorway right of centre contains probably C19 panelled door behind C20 porch. Left return wall of crosswing contains early C17 moulded oak doorframe containing contemporary studded plank door with applied 6-panel front, strap hinges and working lock. Main roof gable-ended to right and hipped to left where it is carried down over the crosswing. INTERIOR: Mostly the result of C19 and C20 modernisations but some later C17/early C18 joinery including a fielded 3-panel door. The dairy retains its slate shelves. Home Farmhouse with its farmbuildings forms part of an exceptionally attractive group of listed buildings in an unspoilt village and the adjacent Cockington Park. Listing NGR: SX8954163719 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390556 | Barn Approximately 5 Metres North West Of Home Farmhouse | 1280083 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.557764 50.462999,-3.557986 50.462924,-3.557943 50.462876,-3.557921 50.462882,-3.557902 50.462861,-3.557807 50.462890,-3.557825 50.462915,-3.557796 50.462923,-3.557767 50.462886,-3.557694 50.462908,-3.557723 50.462959,-3.557764 50.462999))) | Barn. Probably C18 with later alterations. Red cob on tall footings of coursed red sandstone rubble footings, rebuilt sections and additions of red sandstone rubble or weatherborded timber-framing; Roman tile roof and corrugated-iron roofs to outshuts. PLAN: Former threshing barn facing south-east towards Home Farmhouse (qv). Its north-east end is terraced into the hillslope. Central opposing doorways to the threshing floor. Secondary flooring and secondary outshuts on front, either side of doorway. EXTERIOR: Lofted barn. Central front doorway now contains small diagonal plank doorway with window alongside and hatch above, all in the blocking of original full-height doorway. To right a lean-to stable and to left a former cowhouse which used to be open-fronted, 3 bays on circular piers, but is now blocked with stone rubble. Haylofts of cowhouse and stable with continuous loading platform over central doorway. Roof is half-hipped both ends. Right (north-east) end has large loading hatch doorway to loft from terrace. Left (south-west) end has small doorway and loading hatch to loft. Rear wall has been extensively rebuilt with C20 concrete blocks. INTERIOR: Plain carpentry detail. It appears that the south-west end was floored before the threshing floor and north-east end. Roof replaced in C20. This barn and its associated farmbuildings form part of an exceptionally attractive group of listed buildings in an unspoilt village and the adjoining Cockington Park. Listing NGR: SX8952763729 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390557 | Stable Approximately 42 Metres North West Of Home Farmhouse | 1293159 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.558345 50.463055,-3.558498 50.462990,-3.558430 50.462924,-3.558266 50.462991,-3.558345 50.463055))) | Stable, probably former linhay. Probably C19. Local stone rubble with weatherboarded front; thatched roof. PLAN: Stable faces south-east onto farmyard and is built end onto the lane. 3 bays with hayloft over. EXTERIOR: Lofted stable. 3 bays separated by full height stone piers. Each bay contains 2 C20 stable doors with stone wall between up to loft level. Loft loading hatch in left (south-west) end from lane. Roof is half-hipped both end. INTERIOR: Not available for inspection. This stable and the other farmbuildings of Home Farm form part of an exceptionally attractive group of listed buildings in an unspoilt village and the adjoining Cockington Park. Listing NGR: SX8948863736 | 1952-11-20 | 1952-11-20 | ||||
390558 | Lanscombe Farm Cottages Including Butterwell Adjoining South East End Of Front | 1208444 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.558536 50.462907,-3.558638 50.462966,-3.558786 50.462870,-3.558692 50.462807,-3.558536 50.462907))) | Pair of cottages, former farmhouse. Second half of C17 with various later alterations. Front plastered, rest is local stone rubble: older stacks with stone chimneyshafts raised in brick; thatch roof. PLAN: The main block faces south-east, end onto the road with SW end terraced into the hill slope. Present layout derives from subdivision to cottages but probable origins as 3-room-and-cross-passage plan. Lower (NE) room with projecting gable end stack. Other side of passage is hall with projecting rear lateral stack, and at upper end small inner room now converted to stair hall. Secondary 1-room plan rear blocks project to rear of each end, both with end stacks. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys. Plastered front has 3-window front of timber casements with glazing bars, the first-floor windows rising into the thatch eaves. The 2 front doorways both contain C20 plank doors in plain solid timber frames. Roof is gable-ended to right and hipped to left. Right end stack with stone mounting block attached. C20 brick addition on south-west side wall and ground floor window to left of it possibly late C17-early C18 timber flat-faced mullion casement. North east rear block has hipped roof, and south-west rear block has gable-ended roof. INTERIOR: Plain carpentry detail where exposed including plain timber lintels to fireplaces. Lower side of passage is a late C17 plank-and-muntin screen with scratch-moulded muntins and a contemporary 3-fielded panel door. The bases of relatively slender principals show on first floor. Large oven projecting to hall stack now inside a rear lean-to. SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: At south-east end of front wall there is the stone housing of a butterwell. Lanscombe Cottages form part of a group of exceptionally attractive group of listed buildings in an unspoilt village and adjoining Cockington Park. Listing NGR: SX8946863725 | 1952-11-20 | 1952-11-20 | ||||
390559 | Barn Approximately 12 Metres South East Of Lanscombe Farm Cottages Including Outhouses Attached To North West | 1206753 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.558560 50.462749,-3.558582 50.462766,-3.558617 50.462750,-3.558636 50.462767,-3.558678 50.462745,-3.558588 50.462661,-3.558405 50.462745,-3.558451 50.462793,-3.558425 50.462805,-3.558470 50.462849,-3.558528 50.462823,-3.558483 50.462784,-3.558560 50.462749))) | Barn, now used as stables. C19, probably earlier origins, some C20 alterations. Red cob, mostly plastered but exposed in places; front of painted stone rubble; gable-ended Roman tile roof. PLAN: Forms threshing barn facing south-east onto farmyard. Built end onto lane with south-west end terraced into hillslope. Originally with central opposing doors onto threshing floor. South-west end loading hatch at loft level from terrace. Altered in C20 to stables with hayloft over. Probably late C19 outbuildings attached to rear (now used by Lanscombe Farm Cottages (qv). EXTERIOR: Both doorways to former threshing floor now blocked. Front wall contains 2 front doorways to present stables. Left doorway with loading hatch over and flanking windows. Right doorway with wide 5-light window over weatherboarding above. INTERIOR: Plain carpentry detail including roof of scissor-braced trusses. SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: 2 rear outhouses of mixed construction, one each side of blocked central doorway. This former barn, and the other buildings in the farmyard (qqv) form part of an exceptionally attractive group of listed buildings in an unspoilt village and the adjoining Cockington Park. Listing NGR: SX8947963706 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 | ||||
390560 | Barn Approximately 48 Metres South East Of Lanscombe Farm Cottages | 1293134 | MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.558445 50.462430,-3.558581 50.462349,-3.558472 50.462273,-3.558354 50.462343,-3.558388 50.462368,-3.558372 50.462376,-3.558445 50.462430))) | Barn. C19, probably earlier origins, some C20 modernisation. Plastered red cob on stone rubble footings with some stone rubble and concrete repairs; hipped thatch roof. PLAN: Barn built down the hillslope facing north west. Central opposing doors to former threshing floor, rear door now to secondary lean-to extension. EXTERIOR: Nearly full-height large doorways to the threshing floor and smaller doorway in left (north-east) end. INTERIOR: Open to 4-bay roof of king post trusses. This barn and the other buildings of the farmyard form part of an exceptionally attractive group of listed buildings in an unspoilt village and the adjoining Cockington Park. Listing NGR: SX8948363666 | 1975-01-10 | 1975-01-10 |
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