{"type":"FeatureCollection","features":[{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.503224,55.063718],[-1.503133,55.063733],[-1.503256,55.063956],[-1.503059,55.064028],[-1.503117,55.064085],[-1.503379,55.063998],[-1.503224,55.063718]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1987-07-15","end-date":"","entity":42153203,"name":"Stable Range To East Of Holywell Manor House","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041374","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"A 192 NZ 37 SW (East side, off) Holywell, Whitley Bay 8/8 Stable range to east of Holywell Manor House GV II Stable range, C17 remodelled early C19. North part large rubble, south part coursed rubble; Welsh slate roof on north part, pantiles on south. East elevation in 2 sections: 2-storey, 2-bay left part has boarded door under timber lintel to right, blocked segmental-arched doorway to left, and 3 slit vents. 2 part-slatted windows above; coped gables. Single-storey right part shows quoins of earlier building, but largely rebuilt in C19; one boarded door in alternating-block surround; coped right gable. Right return shows slit vents. Rear elevation shows stable doors and external stone stair to boarded door under gablet in 2-storey part; to far right a projecting range with stable doors. Included for group value. Attached brick garage to north is not of special interest. ,","listed-building":"1041374"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.561707,55.127177],[-1.562012,55.127129],[-1.561987,55.127086],[-1.56211,55.127065],[-1.561994,55.126829],[-1.561884,55.126854],[-1.561945,55.127014],[-1.561651,55.127069],[-1.561568,55.126906],[-1.561473,55.126929],[-1.561594,55.127155],[-1.561687,55.127139],[-1.561707,55.127177]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2025-01-07","start-date":"1987-07-15","end-date":"2016-11-21","entity":42153204,"name":"Hyde Park Trekking Centre, A193","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041375","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"History The buildings along the A193 in Blyth were farm buildings from probably the late C18. At the time of the survey they were in use as a trekking centre. The farm buildings were constructed of roughly-squared stone. The roofs were covered with pantile. Attached to the rear were a pair of pigsties. To the rear of the west ranges was a gingang. The buildings were first listed on 15 July 1987. They were taken down on 21 September 2015 after a fire at one of the neighbouring buildings spread and damaged the listed buildings. For safety reasons, the buildings were taken down according to Section 78 of the Buildings Act 1984. Details A 193 NZ 28 SE (North side) Bebside , Blyth 1/12 Hyde Park Trekking Centre Grade II Farmbuildings on foldyard plan, now trekking centre. Probably late C18. Roughly-squared stone with tooled quoins and dressings; pantile roofs. Ranges around rectangular yard open to south. East range part single-storey: 3 stable doors, small slatted windows. 2-storey part to left has brick end stack; roof of lower part hipped at right. North range 2 storeys, 7 bays: 5-bay segmental arcade to left, loft windows directly beneath eaves. West range barn, 6 bays: boarded door flanked by 2 vertical pairs of slit vents, second door to far right under keyed lintel; roof hipped to left. Rear elevation of north range shows attached pair of pigsties to right; to rear of west range attached square gingang with squared stone piers, timber lintels and pyramidal roof. Timber shed on north of gingang is not of special interest. ,","listed-building":"1041375"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.474278,55.072443],[-1.474278,55.072423],[-1.474249,55.072391],[-1.474157,55.072412],[-1.474026,55.072428],[-1.473989,55.072444],[-1.474056,55.072486],[-1.474115,55.072462],[-1.474278,55.072443]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1987-07-15","end-date":"","entity":42153205,"name":"Bridge Over Seaton Burn On Track To Hartley West Farm","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041376","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"B 1325 NZ 37 NV NZ 33687545 (West side, off) 5/16 Bridge over Seaton Burn on track to Hartley West Farm II Bridge, mid-C18. Squared stone. Segmental arch; walls of abutments with slight batter. Band below parapet, which has low gabled coping and terminates in piers with low pyramidal caps. ,","listed-building":"1041376"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.559757,55.110541],[-1.55966,55.110448],[-1.559402,55.11054],[-1.559443,55.110579],[-1.559421,55.110587],[-1.559442,55.110607],[-1.559464,55.1106],[-1.559476,55.110609],[-1.559554,55.110581],[-1.559578,55.110604],[-1.559757,55.110541]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2015-02-04","start-date":"1987-07-15","end-date":"","entity":42153206,"name":"Low Horton Farmhouse","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041377","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"HORTON, Cramlington NZ 27 NE NZ 283797 4/18 Low Horton Farmhouse II House, mid C18,altered and extended to rear late C18 or early C19. Squared stone except for rear block, brick in English Garden Wall Bond 1 and 3. Welsh slate roof with old brick stacks. South elevation 2 storeys, 3 bays. Central renewed door with overlight. 4-pane sash windows except for C19 canted bay on left, with hipped roof. Raised reverse-stepped gable coping; banded end stacks. To right, single-storey 1-bay kitchen with C20 4-pane casement and stepped end stack. Left return, part-rendered, shows renewed 16-pane sashes under wedge lintels in rear block. Rear elevation shows similar fenestration including 20-pane sash stair window, and 8-pane Yorkshire sash in outshut to kitchen. Interior: Fielded 6-panel doors, panelled shutters. Round arches with panelled jambs at foot of stair; dog-leg open-string stair with stick balusters, moulded handrail and moulded newel. The house succeeded Horton Castle, latterly a Delaval possesion; the castle site is that of the detached farmbuilding group to the west, the ruins being removed in the early C19. ,","listed-building":"1041377"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.628428,55.10372],[-1.628455,55.103714],[-1.628474,55.1037],[-1.628479,55.103693],[-1.62847,55.103668],[-1.628441,55.103655],[-1.628413,55.103653],[-1.628372,55.103669],[-1.628364,55.103684],[-1.628371,55.103705],[-1.628398,55.103718],[-1.628428,55.10372]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1987-07-15","end-date":"","entity":42153207,"name":"Old Windmill 700 Metres South West Of Plessey Checks Roundabout","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041378","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"PLESSEY, Blyth Valley NZ 27 NW NZ 238789 3/22 Old Windmill 700 metres south- West of Plessey Checks roundabout II Windmill tower, dated 1749 with initials M W (Matthew White) on lintel of south door. Good-quality squared stone. Straight-sided round tower without any external division between the 3 floor levels. Chamfered plinth. Opposed doorways on ground floor, 3 small windows on each upper floor; all openings in chamfered surrounds. Interior: 2 plain lst-floor fireplaces, various sockets for floor beams and machinery. Intact shell but no roof or floors. ,","listed-building":"1041378"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.617142,55.114827],[-1.617165,55.114786],[-1.6171,55.114774],[-1.617077,55.114815],[-1.617142,55.114827]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1986-12-18","end-date":"","entity":42153208,"name":"Dovecote 7 Metres South East Of Hartford Hall","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041379","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"WANSBECK HARTFORD NZ 28 SW 4/15 Dovecote 7 metres south-east of Hartford Hall GV II Dovecote, early C20. Tooled-and-margined stone with rock-faced plinth and ashlar dressings; stone slate roof. Small square structure. Central boarded door on west flanked by small windows with keystones; 2 slit windows on each return and to rear. All openings under round arches. Below moulded eaves cornice are small openings between rock-faced blocks, blind except for 3 above door on west, which have alighting shelf. Pyramidal roof with swept base of finial; now missing. ,","listed-building":"1041379"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.618174,55.114732],[-1.617565,55.114623],[-1.617544,55.114623],[-1.617516,55.114637],[-1.617501,55.114661],[-1.617837,55.11472],[-1.617861,55.114739],[-1.617895,55.114731],[-1.618213,55.11479],[-1.618222,55.114772],[-1.618219,55.114753],[-1.618174,55.114732]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1986-12-18","end-date":"","entity":42153209,"name":"Terrace And Terrace Walls To South Of Hartford Hall","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041380","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"WANSBECK HARTFORD NZ 28 SW 4/16 Terrace and terrace walls to south of Hartford Hall GV II Terrace and terrace walls, early C20. Rock-faced stone with ashlar dressings. Tall wall with balustrade of linked rings; panelled piers with moulded caps flanking central apsidal recess and curved flight of steps at each end, descending to paved terrace with 1-metre high retaining wall on south. Included for group value. ,","listed-building":"1041380"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.620588,55.115882],[-1.620599,55.115878],[-1.620515,55.115864],[-1.620432,55.115863],[-1.620348,55.115881],[-1.620254,55.11592],[-1.620198,55.115965],[-1.620149,55.11602],[-1.620095,55.116102],[-1.620091,55.116132],[-1.620104,55.116125],[-1.620105,55.116102],[-1.620176,55.116002],[-1.620259,55.115926],[-1.620404,55.115872],[-1.620457,55.115868],[-1.620588,55.115882]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1986-12-18","end-date":"","entity":42153210,"name":"Entrance Screen And Gates To Hartford Hall","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041381","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"WANSBECK HARTFORD NZ 28 SW 4/18 Entrance screen and gates to Hartford Hall GV II* Entrance screen and gates, 1873. Squared stone, cast and wrought iron. Gates by Coalbrookdale Co., Shropshire (maker's plates). 4 openwork piers with central double gates and side gates having central open section with ornate foliage decoration; elaborate heads to bars. To either side similarly ornate sections of railing, with top rail swept up to end in human hand grasping top of bar adjacent to gate pier, on cast-iron dwarf wall. Flanking quadrant walls have low gabled coping; end piers with large ball finials. The gates were made for and exhibited at the Vienna Exhibition of 1873; one of the most ornate examples of High Victorian ironwork in the North of England. ,","listed-building":"1041381"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.522666,55.141882],[-1.521637,55.140533],[-1.521588,55.140544],[-1.521562,55.140511],[-1.52024,55.138771],[-1.520001,55.138831],[-1.520222,55.13912],[-1.52024,55.139174],[-1.520512,55.139525],[-1.520594,55.139607],[-1.521167,55.140366],[-1.521186,55.140421],[-1.522029,55.141528],[-1.522043,55.141568],[-1.522168,55.141724],[-1.522144,55.14173],[-1.522204,55.141813],[-1.52223,55.141809],[-1.522324,55.141932],[-1.522365,55.141926],[-1.522298,55.141837],[-1.522309,55.141835],[-1.522393,55.141946],[-1.522459,55.141927],[-1.52233,55.141756],[-1.522346,55.141753],[-1.522381,55.141799],[-1.522442,55.141784],[-1.522538,55.141908],[-1.522666,55.141882]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1986-12-18","end-date":"","entity":42153211,"name":"Coal Staithes At Blyth Power Station","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041382","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"Listing revised 24-JUN-2008 from Grade II* to Grade II. Coal staithes constructed between about 1910-1923 for the North Eastern Railway Company, altered in about 1994. MATERIALS: timber, the lower level of a set of coal staithes about 375m long of traditional braced timber construction. The structure is formed of substantial timber piles driven into the sea bed carrying a timber deck. The staithes were originally 500m long and comprised three decks with gantries. HISTORY: Blyth initially developed as a fishing port with ancillary salt pans, but during the later 19th and 20th centuries it became Northumberland's premier coal port and for a brief period in the mid 20th century it shipped more coal than any port in Europe. At its peak, the harbour had several sets of staithes, which allowed coal arriving by wagon way and later railway to be dropped from wagons directly into ships. The coal staithes at Blyth power station, known formerly as West Staithes, were the last of the traditional staithes to be built on the River Blyth. Their construction began in about 1910 for the North Eastern Railway Company, but the First World War intervened and they were completed in 1923. The original upper two decks were demolished and the whole structure truncated in 1994/5. REASON FOR DESIGNATION DECISION: these early 20th century coal staithes are designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons: although they have been compromised by partial demolition, these coal staithes retain special historic interest in a national context; there are only three listed coastal/estuarine coal staithes in England and this example at Blyth is therefore a very rare survival; the structure bears witness to the once nationally significant sea-borne coal trade; they reflect the importance of the Port of Blyth as the one time largest coal port in Europe.","listed-building":"1041382"}},{"geometry":{"type":"MultiPolygon","coordinates":[[[[-1.587099,55.183583],[-1.587119,55.183582],[-1.587115,55.183559],[-1.587151,55.183557],[-1.587157,55.183597],[-1.58722,55.183594],[-1.587214,55.183555],[-1.587241,55.183554],[-1.587244,55.183577],[-1.587278,55.183575],[-1.587265,55.183476],[-1.586977,55.183489],[-1.586996,55.183632],[-1.587266,55.18362],[-1.586998,55.183629],[-1.586994,55.183588],[-1.58702,55.183586],[-1.587017,55.183563],[-1.58704,55.183562],[-1.587044,55.183585],[-1.587099,55.183583]]]]},"type":"Feature","properties":{"entry-date":"2013-01-29","start-date":"1986-12-18","end-date":"","entity":42153212,"name":"Nos 2 3 And 4 With Backyard Walls And Outhouse","dataset":"listed-building-outline","typology":"geography","reference":"1041383","prefix":"listed-building-outline","organisation-entity":"220","quality":"authoritative","notes":"ASHINGTON FIRST ROW NZ 28 NE 2/21 Nos. 2, 3 and 4 with backyard walls and outhouses GV II Terrace of cottages, c.1870 by the Ashington Coal Company. Brick in English Garden Wall Bond 1 and 3, with painted stone sills and lintels; Welsh slate roofs. 2 storeys, each cottage 2 bays. Renewed doors; 4-pane sash windows. Banded ridge stacks. Backyard walls with boarded hatches and yard doors, and attached outbuildings. The least altered of the original miners' rows of Ashington; the Coal Company built 300 houses between c.1855 and 1878. ,","listed-building":"1041383"}}],"links":{"first":"http://www.planning.data.gov.uk/entity.geojson?organisation_entity=220&limit=10","last":"http://www.planning.data.gov.uk/entity.geojson?offset=10830&organisation_entity=220&limit=10","next":"http://www.planning.data.gov.uk/entity.geojson?offset=1470&organisation_entity=220&limit=10","prev":"http://www.planning.data.gov.uk/entity.geojson?offset=1450&organisation_entity=220&limit=10"}}