| GRANGE | A farmhouse with its buildings, etc (6) |
| LAYOUT | Arrangement of page, buildings, etc (6) |
| SPENCE | From "distribute", an old dialectical word for a buttery, larder or pantry; or, in Scotland, an inner room such as the parlour of a farmhouse or cottage (6) |
| BARROW | Earthen tumulus such as Belas Knap; or, short word for a handcart for gardening, stable work, building etc (6) |
| REALTY | Land, buildings, etc. |
| ESTATE | Real ___ (houses, buildings, etc.) |
| TIMBER | Wood for building etc. (6) |
| EUCLA | Which town, now almost a ghost town with many of its buildings hidden under sand dunes, was established near the South Australian border in 1885 as a link in the Overland Telegraph? (5) |
| WELSH | Word linking with "cake" for a sconelike food cooked on a bakestone or "dresser" for a farmhouse sideboard (5) |
| GRANT | Owner of Charleston Farmhouse with Vanessa Bell who was a central figure in the Bloomsbury Group set with other creatives including Virginia Woolf and his cousin Lytton Strachey (5) |
| PREMISES | A piece of land and its buildings, considered as a place of business (8) |
| OHM | Came back from the farmhouse with a measure of resistance (3) |
| BASEJUMPER | Someone who parachutes from high buildings etc (4,6) |
| CAPITALASSETS | A company's land, buildings, etc. |
| CHARLESTON | A canvas of a farmhouse in Sussex, where art bloomed, a walled garden originally burgeoned and the love and creativity of Duncan Grant, Vanessa Bell and their fellow bohemian Bloomsburyites once flour |
| COFFERDAM | Form faced with restructuring is a structure for bridge-building etc |
| HOMESTEAD | A farmhouse and its outbuildings (9) |
| ECCLESIOLOGIST | Someone studying the Christian church or its buildings |
| BOTANISTS | Plant experts in NATO? Its buildings in need of emptying out |
| ARSON | Offence committed by a person who unlawfully sets fire to buildings, etc. (5) |