Barns by Type Aisled Barns Bank Barns Box-frame Barns Brick Barns Cob Barns Cruck Barns Mud & Stud Post & Truss Stone Barns Prodigy Barns Barn Conversions Lost & Ruined Barns New Builds Wedding Barns Makers & Recyclers Barns by Region Meet & Eat Museums Home

Barns by Type

Barns are usually classified by regional type (Kentish, Cotswold etc.) by material (stone/timber) or by structure (cruck frame, aisled etc.) Unfortunately, few of them fit into a neat classification. For example, Titchfield Abbey Barn which was originally built as a timber-framed aisled barn, subsequently had one long wall and a gable end replaced by flint and brick, so that now from one side it is a stone, aisled barn, and from the other side it is a timber-clad, aisled barn with some brick walling.

Similarly, cruck-framed barns may have any type of wall fabric as the crucks support the roof independently of the walls. However the crucks are quite difficult to replace, so when they failed, they were often replaced by some other type of truss sitting directly on a stone wall.

Although somewhere like Kent has a long, unbroken stylistic tradition, in other areas styles and bulding techniques appear and disappear. For instance in the Berkshire, South Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire area, “cranked or curved under-principals” appeared in the middle of the eighteenth century and persisted for about a hundred years. Not only does this structure appear in stone, aisled and post and truss barns, but there is no agreement as to its correct terminology.

In order to overcome these problems, I have chosen a number of main and sub-categories and used a “best–fit” approach to allocating the barns. I have also included a group of barns that were converted from other buildings, usually monastic after the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Beyond these there are such classifications as “Monastic Barns”, “Manorial Barns”, “Tithe Barns” and “Prodigy Barns” “Lost & Ruined Barns” and “New Builds”. Obviously many of these fit into seversl classifications so I have tried to include cross references to help you find barns to suit  particular interests.

Cruck Barns

Cruck Frame Barns

Aisled Barns

Aisled Barns

Post & Truss

Post & Truss Barns

Box-frame Barns

Box Frame Barns

Prodigy Barns

Prodigy Barns

Barn Conversions

Lost & Ruined Barns

Stone Barns

Stone Barns

Bank Barns

Bank Barns

Brick Barns

Brick Barns

Cob Barns Mud & Stud

Mud & Stud Barns

New Builds

New Builds

Barn Conversions Lost & Ruined Barns

Wedding Barns

Cob Barns

Tithe Barns