k Cragside Visitor Centre, Tumbleton Stables, Rothbury, Northumberland, c1955c1980. Creator Ursula Clark. Cragside Visitor Centre, Tumbleton Stables, Rothbury, Northumberland, c1955c1980. An exterior view of Cragside Stables, now the National Trust visitor centre, showing the south elevation with two storey gateway into the interior courtyard, seen from the south. The stable block was built around 1864 and extended and remodelled between 1892 and 1893 for William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong, founder of the Armstrong Whitworth armaments company. The architect is unknown, but is similar to the style of Richard Norman Shaw, who designed Cragside House. The stables have four ranges around a courtyard, and the south range is the first access from the main house. It has five bays and a single storey, except in the central bay, where the gateway has two storeys. The end two bays are gabled whilst the second and fourth bays have a square dormer over fourpane windows. The gateway has a wide carriage arch with a string above, and three square panels, the central of which has a clock face. To the left is a semioctagonal stair turret with tiled roof, and above is a tall pyramidal roof with dormer on the southern side and weathervan in the centre. Editorial Stock Photo - Afloimages
Sign up
Login
All images
Cragside Visitor Centre, Tumbleton Stables, Rothbury, Northumberland, c1955 c1980. Creator: Ursula Clark. Cragside Visitor Centre, Tumbleton Stables, Rothbury, Northumberland, c1955 c1980. An exterior view of Cragside Stables, now the National Trust visitor centre, showing the south elevation with two storey gateway into the interior courtyard, seen from the south. The stable block was built around 1864 and extended and remodelled between 1892 and 1893 for William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong, founder of the Armstrong Whitworth armaments company. The architect is unknown, but is similar to the style of Richard Norman Shaw, who designed Cragside House. The stables have four ranges around a courtyard, and the south range is the first access from the main house. It has five bays and a single storey, except in the central bay, where the gateway has two storeys. The end two bays are gabled whilst the second and fourth bays have a square dormer over four pane windows. The gateway has a wide carriage arch with a string above, and three square panels, the central of which has a clock face. To the left is a semi octagonal stair turret with tiled roof, and above is a tall pyramidal roof with dormer on the southern side and weathervan in the centre.
ED

Cragside Visitor Centre, Tumbleton Stables, Rothbury, Northumberland, c1955-c1980. Creator: Ursula Clark.

Cragside Visitor Centre, Tumbleton Stables, Rothbury, Northumberland, c1955-c1980. An exterior view of Cragside Stables, now the National Trust visitor centre, showing the south elevation with two storey gateway into the interior courtyard, seen from the south. The stable block was built around 1864 and extended and remodelled between 1892 and 1893 for William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong, founder of the Armstrong Whitworth armaments company. The architect is unknown, but is similar to the style of Richard Norman Shaw, who designed Cragside House. The stables have four ranges around a courtyard, and the south range is the first access from the main house. It has five bays and a single storey, except in the central bay, where the gateway has two storeys. The end two bays are gabled whilst the second and fourth bays have a square dormer over four-pane windows. The gateway has a wide carriage arch with a string above, and three square panels, the central of which has a clock face. To the left is a semi-octagonal stair turret with tiled roof, and above is a tall pyramidal roof with dormer on the southern side and weathervan in the centre.

Details

ID
109562236

Collection

License type
Editorial

Photographer

Creation date
12-08-2019

Contact Aflo for all commercial uses.


Keywords
More
Sign in
Member access
Login not found.