Listed building outline

Waterloo House

Field Value Fact links
Reference 1041278 Facts
Prefix listed-building-outline Facts
Name Waterloo House Facts
Dataset Listed building outline no fact link
Organisation Northumberland National Park Authority no fact link
Start date 1986-09-03 no fact link
End date no fact link
Entry date 1986-09-03 Facts
Typology geography no fact link
Geometry MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.107803 55.336412, -2.107817 55.336342, -2.107659 55.336331, -2.107645 55.336401, -2.107803 55.336412))) Facts
Point POINT (-2.107731 55.336372) Facts
Notes HARBOTTLE HARBOTTLE VILLAGE NT 9304 (North side) 26/67 Waterloo House GV II House. Early C19. Ashlar with Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys 3 bays. The left bay projects as a 2-storey cross-gabled porch with chamfered segmental-headed doorway. 4-panel inner door with overlight. 12-pane sash above door; 16-pane sashes to right. Gabled roof with ridged coping and kneelers on right. Corniced end and ridge stacks. The house was renamed by the village doctor after his greyhound, King Death, won the Waterloo Cup in 1868. Figure of greyhound now removed to garden of Burradon Hall (q.v.). Upper Coquetdale by David Dippie Dixon. Frank Graham, Newcastle 1974. , Facts
Listed building 1041278 Facts

Available Code Snippets:

{
    "reference": "1041278",
    "prefix": "listed-building-outline",
    "name": "Waterloo House",
    "dataset": "listed-building-outline",
    "organisation-entity": "404",
    "start-date": "1986-09-03",
    "end-date": "",
    "entry-date": "1986-09-03",
    "typology": "geography",
    "geometry": "MULTIPOLYGON (((-2.107803 55.336412, -2.107817 55.336342, -2.107659 55.336331, -2.107645 55.336401, -2.107803 55.336412)))",
    "point": "POINT (-2.107731 55.336372)",
    "entity": 42153108,
    "notes": "HARBOTTLE HARBOTTLE VILLAGE NT 9304 (North side) 26/67 Waterloo House GV II House. Early C19. Ashlar with Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys 3 bays. The left bay projects as a 2-storey cross-gabled porch with chamfered segmental-headed doorway. 4-panel inner door with overlight. 12-pane sash above door; 16-pane sashes to right. Gabled roof with ridged coping and kneelers on right. Corniced end and ridge stacks. The house was renamed by the village doctor after his greyhound, King Death, won the Waterloo Cup in 1868. Figure of greyhound now removed to garden of Burradon Hall (q.v.). Upper Coquetdale by David Dippie Dixon. Frank Graham, Newcastle 1974. ,",
    "listed-building": "1041278"
}
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