Buildings and Settlements
Over much of lowland Durham mining towns and villages dominate the settlement pattern. They vary in scale from small hamlets to large towns and are scattered across the limestone plateau and the valleys of the exposed coal measures, giving parts of the landscape a densely settled or 'semi-rural' character.
Staindrop Village Green
This 19th and 20th century industrial settlement pattern overlies and largely obscures an older nucleated settlement pattern of small 'green' villages of medieval origins which survives elsewhere in the settled lowlands , the lower dales and upland fringe valleys.
Associated with this long established agricultural settlement pattern are larger market towns like Barnard Castle and Durham City. In parts of the Tees Lowlands villages are few but there are numerous shrunken or deserted village sites which belong to this older pattern. The higher uplands remain largely free of settlement, fringed by areas of dispersed farms on land enclosed from the wastes in the 18th and early 19th century. Building clusters and the scattered farms of miner-smallholders are particularly characteristic of the middle and upper dales and some of the more remote parts of the coalfield.
Mining and industrial towns and villages vary in character. Most contain Victorian terraces of brick or stone and areas of 20th century public estate housing. Some are built around the core of an older agricultural village.
Older villages often have a relatively regular layout with buildings set around a central village green. Buildings are of local stone with roofs stone flag or welsh slate in the uplands and upland fringes, and red pan tile on the lowland clays.
In the Pennine Dales many old agricultural villages were enlarged with housing for lead mining and quarry workers but retain much of their vernacular upland character. Market towns and some of the larger older villages like Sedgefield and Lanchester have developed outwards from their older core and contain buildings from many different periods.



