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Latitude: 50.4377 / 50°26'15"N
Longitude: -3.6108 / 3°36'38"W
OS Eastings: 285705
OS Northings: 61003
OS Grid: SX857610
Mapcode National: GBR QR.CV9L
Mapcode Global: FRA 37BW.T99
Plus Code: 9C2RC9QQ+3M
Entry Name: North East and North West Ranges of Buildings to the Higher Yard at Middle Blagdon Farmhouse
Listing Date: 10 January 1975
Last Amended: 25 October 1993
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1195091
English Heritage Legacy ID: 383762
ID on this website: 101195091
Location: Lower Blagdon, Torbay, Devon, TQ3
County: Torbay
Electoral Ward/Division: Blatchcombe
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Traditional County: Devon
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Devon
Church of England Parish: Collaton St Mary the Virgin
Church of England Diocese: Exeter
Tagged with: Agricultural structure
PAIGNTON
SX86SE BLAGDON ROAD, Blagdon
1947-1/2/162 (North East side)
10/01/75 NE and NW ranges of buildings to the
higher yard at Middle Blagdon
Farmhouse
(Formerly Listed as:
BLAGDON ROAD
Barn and outbuildings to NE of
Blagdon House)
GV II
2 ranges of farmbuildings to the higher farmyard at Middle
Blagdon Farm. c1870s, the barn with earlier origins and part
of a planned double courtyard split-level farmyard.
MATERIALS: Local stone rubble with brick dressings and
turnerised slate roof. Barn partly cob.
PLAN: The higher yard is divided from the lower by a farm
lane. The NE range of the higher yard backs on to the lane and
consists of cart-horse stables in the centre, facing into the
higher yard with a probable donkey engine house to the rear
towards the N, projecting into the farm lane. At the NW end,
fronting the lane, a small heated building may have been a
smithy or house for cooking fodder. Adjoining it, to the N,
further stabling fronts the lane. The NW range consists of an
earlier threshing barn, to which a stone porch has been added,
facing into the yard, with pigsties or fowl-houses on the
front. A block at the N end may have been a grain store.
EXTERIOR: NE stable range has a central doorway through from
the yard with steps down to the lane dividing the yards. On
the yard side there is a stable door at the left end, a pair
of slatted doors to the centre and 4 ground-floor top-hung
small-pane stable windows.
The rear elevation (facing onto the lane) has a central
doorway with sliding doors.
To the N a segmental-headed doorway and, at the north end of
the stable range, what appears to be a donkey engine house
with a canted end to the lane.
To the south a shallow lean-to has a central door flanked by
round-headed windows with brick arches. 2 loft doors and 2
loft windows. Adjoining at the right end, but outside the
yard, a small heated block with a ground-floor window onto the
lane and beyond it, a stable with 4 doors.
The NW range has a cob threshing barn with a later, probably
1870s, projecting gabled stone porch with a pair of slatted
doors. Lean-to pigsties or fowl-houses to left and right of
the porch have single doorways on the front. A connecting
block to the left with window and wide opening alongside
connect this range to the carthorse range.
INTERIOR: Only partially inspected. The carthorse range
retains stall partitions and iron mangers. Other fittings of
interest likely to survive.
Part of a large planned farmyard, still in agricultural use
and a rare survival of a split-level Victorian farmyard in
Devon.
Listing NGR: SX8570561003
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
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