The cottage was extended in the 19th century. The original portion is timber-framed with brick infill and a tiled roof, standing on a stone plinth. The 19th-century wing has a stone lower storey and a timber-framed upper storey. In the entrance front of the original portion is a cantedoriel window with a canted hipped roof. Elsewhere are casement windows and dormers.[9]
A timber-framed cottage with brick infill and a tiled roof, standing on a stone plinth. It is in two storeys, and has a T-shaped plan. To the right of the main wing is another, gabled, wing. The windows are casements and dormers.[10]
The cottage is timber-framed with whitewashed brick infill and a slate roof. It is in two storeys. The entrance front contains a doorway, three casement windows on the ground floor and two dormers on the upper floor. At the rear are two doorways, two casements in the lower floor, and another casement and a dormer in the upper floor.[11]
A timber-framed house with whitewashed brick infill and a tiled roof, standing on a stone plinth. The left gable end is in brick. The entrance front contains a door to the right of centre, a casement window on each side of it and two gabled dormers above.[12]
This is a two-storey timber-framed farmhouse with whitewashed brick infill and a tiled roof. A left wing was added in the 19th century; the lower storey is in stone, and the upper storey is partly timber framed, and partly painted to resemble timber-framing. The windows in the lower storey are casements, and those in the upper storey are gableddormers.[13]
The farmhouse is timber-framed with whitewashed brick infill and a slate roof. It is in two storeys with casement windows on the lower floor, and gableddormers above. To the left is a 20th-century brick extension painted to resemble timber framing, and to the right is a 19th-century timber-framed lean-to.[14]
The farmhouse is timber-framed with whitewashed and rendered brick infill. It has a corrugated iron roof, and is in two storeys. In the entrance front is a doorway and a gableddormer. The other windows are casements.[15]
The bathing pool is square, constructed in red ashlarsandstone, and surrounded by sandstone paving. At one corner are stone steps, and diagonally opposite is a water spout. To the side of the pool is a rectangular well, also with steps leading down into it. In an adjacent rockery is a rectangular datestone.[16]
The cottage was extended in the middle of the 19th century. It is timber-framed with brick infill and has a slate roof. The cottage is in two storeys, with a symmetrical two-bay entrance front. The windows are casements and gabled semi-dormers.[17]
The cottage is constructed in whitewashed stone rubble with a tiled roof. It is in a single storey with an attic, and has a symmetrical entrance front in three bays. There is a central door, flanked by casement windows.[18]
This was built for the Peckforton estate, and consists of a two-storey sandstone gateway. In the centre is a pointed arch, which is flanked by two circular towers on each side in bartizan style.[19]
The farmhouse is in brick with a tile roof. It has two storeys with timber-framedgables. The entrance front is in three bays. To the left of centre is a timber-framed gabled porch. The windows are casements.[20]
The bathing house is constructed in stone, brick and timber framing, and has two storeys. To the left of this is a timber-framed hut, also in two storeys, with a ground floor loggia containing a pumping house.[21]
This originated as a country house named Beeston Towers, which was timber-framed with jettying. Repeated additions and alterations were made during the 20th century in rendered brick. The building was used at one time as a school, and later converted into a public house, restaurant and hotel. It is a complex building, with features including much decorative timber-work, a tower, a lantern, and an octagonal belvedere. Some windows are mullioned or mullioned and transomed, and others are oriel windows.[22][23][24]