Exterior
The older of the two houses is a low, fully lofted farmhouse with gable end chimneys. Built abutting the long (S) wall of the original house is a taller, 2 storey, 3-window farmhouse, now forming the front of the house. The original house is fully lofted, with rubble walls and boulder foundation, partly rendered. Steeply pitched slate roof, and tall gable end stacks with dripstones and capping, rendered. The chimney to the right serving the inglenook is a recent re-build, based on the dimensions of the original chimney, which had been replaced by a smaller brick chimney. The existing back door (on the N side) is offset to the right, with a wide window to the left (E) serving the main room, with a smaller window to the extreme left serving the pantry, and with a small window to the right (W) lighting the stairs, now blocked by later building. In the E gable is a recent window cut to the ground floor, with an original window to the loft. All window frames are replacements. Abutting the W end of the N side of the original house is a single storey dairy and boiling house with rubble walls, roof covering of corrugated iron and with a massive square chimney to the gable end. To the W of the dairy is a complete horse engine of cast-iron, originally used for churning. Abutting the W gable wall of the house is a late C19 lean-to dairy or cold store, accessed from the boiling house.
The later house was probably added in the mid C19, to the long, S wall of the original and comprises a 2-storey, 3-window farmhouse with a central door and formal elevation. Coursed rubble walls, thin slate roof covering, with slate copings. Gable end stacks, rendered. Windows are 12-pane horned sashes with rendered shouldered architraves. Narrow 8-pane sash windows to E gable, one to ground floor and two to first floor, with flat brick arch heads. Bay window to W gable wall. Abutting gable end is brick lean-to dairy.