This site, includes two large late twentieth century buildings housing leisure complexes standing within plots of older character. Between Farm Road the land is depicted as enclosed farmland on the 1851 OS - the division probably dating to the time of disparkment - Sheffield Deer Park is though to have stretched down as far as the Sheaf. The tennis and bowls grounds to the north of this area were laid out in the early 2Oth century in the grounds of a small grinding workshop (likely to have been erased by the deep foundations for the ice rink block). At around the same time a 'Dispensary (Tuberculosis)' [later shown as a 'Chest Clinic'] is built on to the south of this area. Below ground remains may exist of this building which was sited just to the south of the present ice rink block. To the east of Farm Road the land was (before the construction of the Midland Railway) part of the grounds of a mansion, rebuilt in 1824 but probably dating to the time of disparkment, that was the Sheffield home of the Duke of Norfolk and his agent. The mansion was demolished in 1967. The building of the midland railway disrupted the coherence of the gardens. Farm road and Farm bridge to the west of the railway line are old names pertaining to the mansion.