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Horsham District Council

Listed building outline: Wappingthorn Farm Dairy buildings. A rare example of an Inter-War model dairy farm particularly unusual for its pioneering use of concrete construction used architecturally rather than just structurally by a noted practitioner, Maxwell Ayrton LB/0006

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Wappingthorn Farm Dairy buildings. A rare example of an Inter-War model dairy farm particularly unusual for its pioneering use of concrete construction used architecturally rather than just structurally by a noted practitioner, Maxwell Ayrton LB/0006

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MULTIPOLYGON (((-0.332882 50.909148,-0.332876 50.909129,-0.332829...
end-date
entry-date
2005-06-03
listed-building
1392890
name
Wappingthorn Farm Dairy buildings. A rare example of an Inter-War model dairy farm particularly unusual for its pioneering use of concrete construction used architecturally rather than just structurally by a noted practitioner, Maxwell Ayrton
notes
reference
LB/0006
start-date
2005-04-21
listed-building-grade
address-text
document-url
organisation
description
Model dairy farm buildings. Designed by Maxwell Ayrton FRIBA for Sir Arthur Howard in 1929-1930. Some later C20 alterations. These buildings are particularly unusual for the use of concrete as an architectural rather than merely structural function. Brown brick in header or English bond with concrete towers, linking wall and columns, tiled roofs (part formerly thatched). Mainly one storey with mainly pivoting metal multipane casement windows. PLAN: Roughly rectangular complex of cow sheds, milking parlours, silo towers with linking wall and open-fronted barn with attached circular dairy to the west. EXTERIOR: Dairy is a circular building of one storey of header bond brickwork surrounded by eight feet high columns, one foot high in diameter at the base and one foot six inches at the head, made of rust-coloured aggregrate and two further columns on either side to link block. Conical roof, originally thatched but replaced after the Second World War with concrete Broseley tiles, surmounted by an octagonal tiled lantern with wooden louvres. The two windows have been replaced by later C20 upvc casements and the formerly open link block closed in at the sides in stretcher bond brickwork. The remainder of the complex is mainly of one storey brown brick in English bond but includes concrete silo towers and linking wall in the centre of the south front and a series of concrete columns to an open-fronted barn to the north-west. The silo towers and linking wall are made of a well compacted 1:2:2 mix by volume of concrete showing the lines of the two feet by six inch lift used to form the structures. The two towers are tall roughly octagonal tapering structures with shuttered ventilation openings at the top and conical tiled roofs with metal finials. The parapet to the central linking concrete wall has half-round ridge tiles set in concrete, clock face with gabled weather canopy over, three half round ridge tiles as a decorative feature on each side and wide entrance with tiled canopy. INTERIOR: Dairy retains the orginal white tiles with a blue tiled band at the top and original slate shelf. Apart from the milking parlour to the south west the other parts of the building were not inspected internally.
uprns
100062673590,010094146260
documentation-url
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