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The house is in sandstone, with brick dressings, a stepped and cogged eaves cornice, a pantile roof, and two storeys. On the right is a fixed-light window, to the left is a casement window under a gauged brick arch, and the upper floor contains a horizontally-sliding sash window. [3] Gardenstone Farmhouse, granary and stable
The viaduct comprises 22 semi-circular arches with spans of 19.2 metres (63 ft) flanked by a pair of abutment arches of 5.5-metre (18 ft) span. The arch rings are 900 millimetres (35 in) thick. The arches and spandrels are built of red brick set in lime mortar with ashlar spring courses. The deck parapets are 2.2 metres (7 ft 3 in) high.
Most of the earlier listed buildings are houses and associated structures, farmhouses, farm buildings, a chapel, and a Sunday school. The railway station was rebuilt in about 1886, and its platform buildings and footbridge are listed. The other listed buildings include a church, two war memorials, and an air raid siren.
Originally a farmhouse, it is in brick on a stone plinth, with stone dressings, quoins, and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys, two bays, and a rear wing. The doorway and the ground floor windows have basket-arched hood moulds and relieving arches, and the windows also have a dog-tooth band. The doorway has a moulded surround.
A brick house with brick bands, a modillion eaves cornice, and a slate roof. There are two storeys with an attic, a double-depth plan, three bays, and a 20th-century garage on the right. The doorway has a moulded timber surround and a pediment, and the windows are casements with cambered brick arches. [19] II: Pier (northwest)
At the western extent there is a ramp from the beach level up to the promenade. The ramp has commercial units within its brick arches. The last cast-iron arch to the western side is also brick-faced". [1] Later in the twentieth century a former public toilet was added, half in-filling the preceding four arches. [1]
To this was added the corn exchange of 1875 by Charles Knowles. The Corn Exchange immediately behind the rotunda, is square with a glazed hipped roof above horizontal-planked coving with rich late 19th-century ornamentation to the front and back walls. The central entrances have Byzantine-style semi-circular brick arches with a large keystone.
A brick farmhouse, the lower storey rendered, with a brick band and a stone-slate roof. There are two storeys, two bays, a later single-bay wing to the left, and a later gabled porch. The windows are casements with stone sills and cambered brick arches. There are external steps in the left wing leading to a doorway in the upper floor.