Listed Buildings Outside Conservation Area


Hallas Bridge Mill on the north bank of Hewenden Beck :: A mill and attached chimney. Early C19 with watershot masonry, stone slate roof, three storeys with a gable on to the stream. 12 bays of windows with lintels and sills with 9-pane glazing with upper casement. The first bay was occupied by latrine tower with semi-circular section. This has doorways approached by small gallery from each floor. An added bay to the right has an archway to ground floor. The rear has 13 bays of similar windows with semi-circular stair-tower in 6th bay which has doorway with monolithic jambs set in base. The 12th and 13th bays project and are attached to the tapering chimney that is rectangular in section. Hallas Lane (north side) Nos 2, 3, 4, 7 and 8 Hallas Hall Farm Cottages :: A house that is now in multiple occupation. Late C17 or early C18 with finely dressed gritstone, stone slate roof. 3-cell, central lobby-entry plan double-depth. Two storeys with 8 bays, seven 1st-floor windows, a plinth, cymamoulded band. The doorways in the 3rd and 8th bays have monolithic jambs and chamfered surrounds which rise to form false ogee lintels. There is a Bullseye window over the 3rd bay doorway. Other bays have double-chamfered cross-windows, coped gables with kneelers. There are two well-dressed corniced ridge stacks. The rear has three C19 doorways with monolithic jambs and double-chamfered mullioned windows. There are three cross-windows (2 lacking mullions) to the ground floor with another cross-window to light stair at mezzanine level. 1st floor has three 4-light windows. 2 stacks set in front of ridge. Interior: westernmost room, that to left, has fine segmental-arched fireplace with skewbacks and cymamoulded surround. Harden Beck Bridge adjacent to the Malt Shovel Inn :: Road-bridge that is probably late 18th century. Dressed stone with 2 segmental-arches with pointed cut-water to central pier and a band and coped parapet. Beckfoot Lane (south side, off) Footbridge over Harden Beck to Shipley Golf Course. :: A pack-horse type footbridge that is probably late C17 or early C18. It is a single-span segmental arched bridge with parapet on the south side and has roughly-dressed stone voussoirs with large blocks of roughly dressed stone to a low parapet.
Hewenden Viaduct :: Railway viaduct. C1880. Engineer probably Richard Johnson. Hammer-dressed and rock-faced stone. 17 semicircular arches 120 feet high and each spanning 50 feet carried on tall rock-faced stone piers. The piers flanking the central 5 arches are thicker with projecting pilaster. The band and parapet has 7 projecting retreats with abutments either end. It formerly carried the Great Northern railway line from Bradford to Keighley. It was reopened to pedestrians, horse riders and cyclists in 2005 as a part of the Great Northern Trail. Wilsden Road (east side), Harden Malt Shovel Inn :: A mid-late C17 public-house with hammer-dressed stone, dressed quoins, stone slate roof. Two storeys with a single-storey rear aisle or outshut. 2-cell gable-entry plan, double-depth. All windows are double-chamfered mullioned with those to the ground floor having a continuous hood mould, which continues round left gable. The first cell (housebody) has a 2-light fire-window and 5-light window with another 2-light window opened between. 1st floor has 2-light and 5-light window lacking some mullions. The second cell has a 5-light window on each storey. A later added cell to right is in keeping re-using quoins to right gable, which lack coping. The left gable is coped with kneelers and stack, one other stack to ridge and another, late C20, set in front of ridge to right-hand end. Rear has 2-light original window and other inserted windows in keeping. Left-hand return wall is rendered and has doorway with monolithic jambs. Interior: stop-chamfered spine beams; one to housebody is roughly-dressed tree with forked branch. Rear room has segmental-arched fireplace with stop-chamfered surround and visible oak-post of timbered arcade. Front has circular plaque recording that it has been chosen as a “Tetley Heritage Inn”. Prominently sited next to Harden Beck Bridge. Wilsden Road (east side, off) Harden Mytholme :: Early 18th century house with porch added probably early C20 with re-used date stone dated 1685. Hammer-dressed stone, larger dressed stone to porch, stone slate roof. Two storeys and seven bays with quoins and band. A 2-storey gabled porch set into the 5th bay, which has Tudor-arched dated lintel but lacks original jambs; chamfered string and 3-light window above with arched lights. Coped gable with kneelers and finials to apex; 2-light window to return walls on 1st floor. All other bays have cross-windows with plain-stone surrounds and recessed flat-faced mullions. Coped gables with kneeler. End and one ridge stacks, all with blind arcaded panels. Ruin Bank Wood St David's Ruin :: Folly. Initialled and dated “B. F. 1796” (Benjamin Ferrand) Hammer-dressed stone, ashlar dressings. Tall wall with pointed-arch to one side of a short circular tower with 2 pointed-arched windows; with inner rebate for glazing, to either side of pointed-arched doorway with inscribed lintel. Roll-moulded band. A typical folly conventionally ruined, prominently sited on hill top above Harden village; visible from St. Ives the home of Benjamin Ferrand.
Sandy Banks, Bank Bottom Cottage :: Former endowed school that is now a house. Built C1680 with mid C20 extension. Hammer-dressed stone, roughly dressed quoins, stone slate roof. Single storey. 3 bays to former Sunday School room. Original chamfered mullioned window of 3 arched lights with sunken spandrels to right. Inserted doorway and altered window to left. 2 ridge stacks. Right-hand return has original 3-light window and coped gable with kneelers. A rare and early example of an endowed school. Coplowe Lane (west side), Norr Fold Farmhouse :: House and cottage. House initialled and dated “IMSM 1679” (John and Susanne Midgley) with early-mid C19 addition forming cottage. Hammer-dressed stone, stone slate roofs. 2 storeys. House: single-cell, double-depth, gable-entry plan, south-front has quoins to right. Double-chamfered mullioned window with 2 king-mullions of 9 lights (3 + 3 + 3) with 2 of 4 lights above (some mullions removed). Drip mould over ground-floor window. Shaped kneeler and coping to right. Gable stacks. Rear: probably single-storey outshut raised to 2 storeys with mid-late C18 windows. Ground floor has two 3-light flatfaced mullioned windows. 1st floor has 4-light window to right of 3-light double-chamfered mullioned window. Right-hand return has original doorway with composite jambs, basket-arched lintel with date and cyma-moulded surround and cornice. Over the door is a 2-light window with arched lights with sunken spandrels with another window to the left. The first floor doorway to right has tie-stone jambs approached up a flight of 11 stone steps. Interior: doorway opens against panelled heck-screen. To right of fireplace is a C18 cupboard with fluted pilasters and dentil cornice. Stairs separate the 2 ground-floor rooms. Coplowe Lane (west side), Norr Fold Farm Barn :: Barn. Late C16 or early C17 that is timber-framed with early-mid C18 stone cladding. Thin coursed rubble, dressed quoins. Stone slate roof. 5 bays, single aisle. Segmental-arched cart-entry set in aisle. Inner lintel is deeply curved timber which may be re-used cruck blade. Doorway with deep lintel and double tie-stone jambs with chamfered surround to right (blocked). Interior: Posts on pad stones with convex braces to tie-beams and arcade plate. Good oak roof with kingpost trusses with single-angle struts. Coplowe Lane (west side), Norr Fold Farm Barn :: Barn. Late C16 or early C17 that is timber-framed with early-mid C18 stone cladding. Thin coursed rubble, dressed quoins. Stone slate roof. 5 bays, single aisle. Segmental-arched cart-entry set in aisle. Inner lintel is deeply curved timber which may be re-used cruck blade. Doorway with deep lintel and double tie-stone jambs with chamfered surround to right (blocked). Interior: Posts on pad stones with convex braces to tie-beams and arcade plate. Good oak roof with kingpost trusses with single-angle struts.