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Owston's Warehouse

Owston's Warehouse is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. A quay was built on the River Derwent in Malton in 1725, with a stone warehouse on it. In the late 18th century, a new warehouse was built adjoining the existing one. It was probably used to store corn, and may have been built for Mr Owston; he was recorded as the tenant in 1809. His yard extended back to Yorkersgate and included a maltings and other buildings to the rear. In the early 20th century, the ground floor openings were blocked up, and the level of the first floor was lowered by 34 inches (86 cm), while retaining the original timbers. The warehouse is built of red brick with stone dressings and a hipped pantile roof. It has a rectangular plan, three storeys on the river front, two on the yard front, and seven bays. In the centre of the river front is a wide segmental-arched entrance, and there are windows with segmental arches on the current ground floor and flat arches on the upper floor. The yard front contains irregular openings. It has been grade II listed since 1979.

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76 m

York House, Malton

York House is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. The core of the building was probably constructed in the 15th century, within the town walls. It was rebuilt in about 1684, perhaps for William Strickland or Ralph Elwes. It was partly rebuilt in the early 18th century, when the centre of the garden front was brought forward. It had substantial gardens, which survive largely intact. The building was Grade II* listed in 1951, and the wall and railings in front of it are separately Grade II* listed. The history of the building is linked to that of the neighbouring Talbot Hotel, and the house currently forms an annexe to the hotel. The house is built of sandstone, with a stone slate roof, coped gables and shaped kneelers. It has two storeys and an attic, and an H-shaped plan, with a centre range of two bays, and flanking gabled cross-wings, on a chamfered plinth. In the centre is a doorway with an eared architrave and a keystone, above it is a coved eaves course, and a moulded eaves cornice, and in the attic is a gabled dormer. The wings have quoins and sillbands. In the centre at the rear is a giant round-headed arch with a rusticated and quoined surround. The windows in all parts are sashes in architraves. Inside, the entrance hall retains an early 18th-century paved floor, and early panelling and staircases also survive. The wall in front of the house is built of stone, about 0.5 metres (1 ft 8 in) tall, with cambered coping, ending in square piers with a moulded cornice and pyramidal cap. The gate piers are square, with rebated angles and banded rustication, each with a moulded cornice, a stepped cap, and a ball and pedestal finial with a band of vermiculated rustication. The gates, overthrow and railings are in wrought iron, and highly ornamented.
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107 m

Talbot Hotel, Malton

The Talbot Hotel is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. The building straddles the line of the town wall, and the Malton Buildings Group argues that part of the wall may survive in its basement. A large house stood on the site by 1599, elements of which may also survive in the basement. It was purchased by the Strickland baronets in 1672, and was generally used as a guest house for friends of the family visiting the town to hunt and race horses. Between 1740 and 1743, it was converted into a coaching inn. Its first landlord was Walter Baldock, formerly of the town's Talbot Inn, and he named the new business as the "New Talbot Inn". The west wing was extended in about 1775, and in 1808 a third storey was added. By this time, it was served by stagecoaches to Leeds, York, Scarborough and Whitby, and it became known as the "Talbot Hotel". The main block was remodelled in about 1840, and in the 1870s a billiard room was added. In 1946, the hotel was leased to Trust Houses Ltd, which incorporated three neighbouring houses into the property, increasing the total number of bedrooms from 16 to 26. The hotel was grade II* listed in 1951. It was refurbished between 2010 and 2012 and was thereafter managed by the Fitzwilliam Malton Estate. For three years, the hotel's menus were overseen by James Martin. The hotel is mainly built of rendered stone, with pink and cream mottled brick at the rear, quoins, a moulded eaves cornice and a hipped slate roof with iron corner scrolls. It consists of four ranges around a courtyard, and has three storeys. The entrance front has six bays, and contains a doorway with a plain surround and a radial fanlight. The windows are sashes with flat arches of voussoirs. The front facing Yorkersgate has five bays, and a two-story two-bay wing to the left. In the centre is a doorcase flanked by square piers, and with a plain cornice on moulded corbels. The doorway has a rusticated surround, and a flat arch of voussoirs with a keystone. Above the doorway is a square bay window containing a tripartite sash window under a projecting moulded cornice, and the other windows are sashes. The garden wall and gateways, and retaining wall and steps to the west of the hotel are separately grade II* listed. They resemble the nearby Vanbrugh Arch, and so are suspected of having been designed by John Vanbrugh. The inner face of the garden wall is mainly in red brick, the outer face is mainly in limestone, and it has flat coping. The wall is about 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in) tall, and runs northwest for about 100 metres (330 ft), then south for about 30 metres (98 ft). It contains two square-headed archways in Hildenley limestone. The archway facing the entrance to the hotel is ornamented, it has radiating voussoirs and heavily rusticated jambs, and is infilled with stone and brick. To the west is another similar, but less ornamented arch, which is not infilled. The retaining wall and staircase are in Hildenley limestone. The terrace wall extends for about 60 metres (200 ft), and has cambered coping, and pilaster buttresses that form piers. The staircase makes a quarter turn, it has raked parapet walls with chamfered coping, and it ends in cylindrical piers with shallow domed tops. It is flanked by raked screen walls with square piers. At the head of the staircase is a short flight of simpler steps.
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135 m

The Cornmill

The Cornmill is a historic building in Malton, North Yorkshire, a town in England. A large corn mill lay on the River Derwent in Malton, but its power relied on a weir which impeded shipping. As a result, it was removed in 1845, and the mill was demolished. The owner, Hurtley and Sons, adapted the early 18th century Derwent Navigation building into a new mill. The company later moved to Kingston upon Hull, and in 1887 the building was adapted for use by the newly-founded Malton Biscuit Company. This was not a success, and closed in 1894. The building next served as the offices and warehouse of the Brandsby Agricultural Trading Association, before being converted into flats. In 2018, the flats were purchased by Impact Living, restored, and let to people with physical and mental health conditions. The building has been grade II listed since 1992. The building is constructed of pink and cream mottled brick on a sandstone plinth, with dressings in orange-red brick, a sill band, a moulded eaves cornice, and a slate roof. The main block has four storeys and eight bays and a central five-storey gabled bay. To the left is a cross-wing with four storeys and three bays, under a pediment containing an oculus, and there is a single-storey three-bay boiler house. The ground floor of the wing has three recessed arched openings, the middle one with a doorway, and the outer ones with windows. Most of the windows in the building are cross windows.
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138 m

Palace Cinema, Malton

The Palace Cinema is a commercial building in Yorkersgate in Malton, North Yorkshire, England. The structure, which was originally commissioned as a corn exchange, is a Grade II listed building.