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The hayloft of the village Chereshovitsa, Bulgaria Desperate Conflict in a Barn, 1853.Haylofts were used to hide escaped slaves on the Underground Railroad.. A hayloft is a space above a barn, stable or cow-shed, traditionally used for storage of hay or other fodder for the animals below.
To prevent small gaps around the closed doors at the beam penetration that would allow birds to enter the barn, one farmer in Reasnor, Iowa, designed a hay hood with a "bunker door" that when closed, was an angled floor on the hay hood, completely enclosing the hood and keeping birds such as sparrows and pigeons out of the barn. [5]
The barn is in sandstone with a chamfered eaves band, and a tile roof with a verge parapet. There are two levels, with a hay loft above cattle sheds, and a long front of about 25 metres (82 ft). In the lower level are two wide entries, and three doors with heavy lintels, and in the upper level is a hay loft door. [38] II: Barn northeast of ...
Hay is stored in the tallet or hay-loft above and cattle are housed over winter below. The full-height columns are of rubble-stone and lime-mortar Linhay at Higher Troswell , Cornwall A linhay ( / ˈ l ɪ n i / LIN -ee ) is a type of farm building found particularly in Devon and Somerset , south-west England.
The barn is in stone with a stone slate roof, and two levels, consisting of a hay loft over a byre. It contains top-hung casement windows , two with Tudor arched heads, doorways with similar heads, and hay loft doors.To the right is a later lean-to extension.
The dairy barn was also built around 1880. It too is a gable-roofed bank barn. Deitrich's original section is 90 by 40 feet, with the first-story walls of thick fieldstone. Above is the hay loft, with tall openings on the side filled with louvers for ventilation. On top of the ridge are two square ventilators.
The barn probably originated as a hay loft over a stable, and is in stone with a green slate roof. Above the entrance is a slated canopy, and to the right is a 19th-century single-storey washhouse with a hipped roof. [16] Outbuilding, Hollin Hall
The roof of the barn is in the shape of a Gothic arch, a form designed to maximize the size of the upper level hay loft. The exterior is finished in wooden clapboards. [2] The barn was built about 1925, and represents an innovative yet short-lived solution to meeting the needs of a diverse farm property in the harsh climate of northern Maine.