We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 50.9017 / 50°54'6"N
Longitude: -1.0506 / 1°3'2"W
OS Eastings: 466853
OS Northings: 111788
OS Grid: SU668117
Mapcode National: GBR BBZ.K5H
Mapcode Global: FRA 86PQ.GHJ
Plus Code: 9C2WWW2X+MP
Entry Name: Barn at Shafters Farm
Listing Date: 29 July 2014
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1420924
ID on this website: 101420924
Location: Anmore, Winchester, Hampshire, PO7
County: Hampshire
District: Winchester
Civil Parish: Denmead
Traditional County: Hampshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Hampshire
Church of England Parish: Denmead All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Portsmouth
Tagged with: Barn Thatched barn
Barn, probably C17, with some later repairs and introduced timber.
Barn, probably C17, with some later repairs and introduced timber.
MATERIALS: a predominantly oak timber frame, clad in corrugated sheeting but formerly it would have been weather-boarded with a thatched roof.
PLAN: a three-bay aisled barn, aligned roughly north-south, with a central entrance porch to the west and a secondary entrance opposite it to the east.
EXTERIOR: the principal elements of the timber frame are in place; these include jowled corner posts and aisle posts, wall plates, braces and much of the roof structure. The outer cill beam has been replaced and the building sits on a concrete plinth. It has a deep, steeply sloping hipped roof that extends over the aisles, and a half-hipped roofed porch to the west.
INTERIOR: throughout the barn jowled posts are steeply cut away above the braces rather than gently rounded off as is the norm. The northern aisle posts rest on sole plates that extend from the perimeter of the barn. Elsewhere aisle posts rest on concrete pads or bases. Within the northern half of the barn the timber frame is braced with upward curving braces at the angles; in the southern half only the end wall is braced. Aisle posts are braced to the aisle plates and tie beams, in some cases with ogival or wany braces, and are tied to the wall plate. Trusses either side of the entrance bay are braced to the tie beam with upward curving braces. To allow access, the central bays are not braced; on both the east and west sides the wall plate over the central bay has a pegged scarf joint. Some of the studs remain in place in the north wall, elsewhere the studs and mid-rails have been replaced and are nailed in. The frame is numbered but by component joints rather than sequentially from north to south or vice versa. The north-west section beneath the aisles is subdivided into storage compartments and beneath the porch is clad with wide horizontally laid planks.
The barn has a queen post roof with a single row of purlins and paired rafters without a ridge piece. It has been repaired, introducing some new timber.
It is believed that the site has been occupied since the medieval period. At the core of the former farmhouse there are elements of a C16 or possibly early C17 building, and of a plan which suggests either a two cell building with an end chimney, or a three cell building of which the western bay was rebuilt. This building was substantially rebuilt, altered and extended in the C18, C19 and C20.
Aisled barns with queen post roofs are found from the C16 to C18, and the scantling of the timber and method of construction suggests that this barn may also be C17 in date and altered in the C18 and C19. Its rectangular footprint is shown on C19 and early C20 OS maps.
The barn at Shafters Farm, probably C17, is listed for the following principal reasons:
* Architectural interest: a little-altered example of an aisled barn, displaying original joinery of a high standard, and later modifications to it;
* Historic interest: built as part of a farmstead with a contemporary, although subsequently altered, farmhouse.
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.
Other nearby listed buildings