Latitude: 51.912 / 51°54'43"N
Longitude: -2.8612 / 2°51'40"W
OS Eastings: 340854
OS Northings: 224071
OS Grid: SO408240
Mapcode National: GBR FD.PLX6
Mapcode Global: VH78X.C67L
Plus Code: 9C3VW46Q+RG
Entry Name: Barn at Lower Tresenny
Listing Date: 9 January 1956
Last Amended: 19 October 2000
Grade: II*
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 1954
Building Class: Agriculture and Subsistence
Also known as: The Barn at Lower Tresenny
ID on this website: 300001954
Location: 400m SE of Grosmont village, immediately S of the road junction to Middle Tresenny, and some 30m SW of Lower Tresenny farmhouse.
County: Monmouthshire
Town: Abergavenny
Community: Grosmont (Y Grysmwnt)
Community: Grosmont
Locality: Tresenny
Traditional County: Monmouthshire
Tagged with: Building
An extremely rare example of a surviving cruck-framed corn barn of c1550, with lofted cowhouse at lower end.
Timber framed over stone base to the long walls, upper part weatherboarded in oak, thinly coursed rubble stone to gable walls, C20 corrugated steel roof. Opposing off-centre doorways to threshing floor. On NE side, the upper barn wall is weatherboarded and the lower wall has a C16 6-light diamond mullion in chamfered, roll moulded frame (elevation partly obscured by C20 addition). N gable has three ground-floor doorways to cowhouse; chamfered frames, C16 plank door to right doorway. Upper gable has a wooden 5-light diamond mullion in chamfered frame. Lean-to (to left) has unglazed opening on ground floor and boarded door to pitching loft above.
Barn of 6 bays. Two pairs of massive crucks with exceptionally fine carpentry flank each side of the threshing floor. The N pair of crucks survive complete, S pair of crucks have been sawn off below the tie. Breadth of cruck blades is greatest between tie and collar. At apex blades do not converge but support a triangular yoke. Two tiers of purlins, the top row trenched, the bottom row butted directly against the back of the cruck blades and supported from the ends of the tie beams by angle struts. In addition to the two cruck trusses, are three collar and tie beam trusses which rest on heavy posts with jowled heads. Rectangular wall framing to sides, covered by oak weatherboarding. Flagged threshing floor has centre doorway to lower cowhouse and plank door with strap hinges.
Highly graded II* as a well-preserved and exceptionally rare example of a C16 cruck-framed barn. Group value with the farmhouse and listed farm buildings at Lower Tresenny.
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