A sandstone house with a stone-slate roof in an L-shaped plan with three storeys. It has a symmetrical front, with a central three-storey porch flanked by a gabledbay on each side. The outer and inner doorways have chamfered surrounds, and the outer door has an inscribed lintel. Over the first floor window is a panel carved with a dog. The windows are mullioned. On the left side of the house is a 19th-century single-storey porch.[4][5]
A pair of houses at right angles to each other, the disused house being the older. They are in sandstone with roofs of slate and stone-slate. Both houses have two storeys, and a central two-storey gabled porch flanked by one bay on each side. The older house has one sash window, the other windows being mullioned. Its doorway has a quoined surround and an inscribed lintel. The farmhouse has French windows and one mullioned window. Its doorway has a Tudor arched head.[6]
A former toll house in sandstone with a slate roof in a single storey. It has a two-bay face, and a canted end. The windows have round heads, and there is a large lunette window.[4][9]