This building dates to 1485. Moorhouse Farm is a large house of 4½ bays. The 1½ -bay hall has a fine hall truss with arch-braced tie beam and with jowled queen struts. All members of this truss, including posts and principal rafters, are chamfered. There is a single end-bay beyond the half-bay of the hall. Presumably, this single bay was the service bay, in which case, the parlour end comprised two, in-line bays that appear to have been partitioned into two rooms from the start. The clasped purlin roof is typical of Hampshire at this date but the full hips at each end are more typical of Surrey, a county that is only a mile or so away. A large seventeenth-century wing has been added at the service end. (Miles and Worthington 2001, VA 32, list 117).