Guest Hall:  on the western side of the. cloister. C. 13th  (WARD)
The Western side:of the cloister remains unexplored. The buildings were still standing in 1730, with steps up to the guest house and the Abbot's lodging still there.  Early English lancet windows in Stukeley's drawing (H80).
The Abbot's lodging probably extended to the existing road (H79).
‘The old Guest House (a wrong name) has been pulled down during the past year [1883]’ (COX18).
 
Western sIype:: passageway into the cloister (WARD).
 
Warming-house:  also called ‘Fratry or Calefactory, where the Canons greased their shoes, warmed themselves, and let blood’ (H79).
 
Cemetery:  to the east of the side chapels;  canons meditated there daily (WARD).
 
Fishponds:  mention is made of these in 1490.  Walls' foundations damming the brook to form fishponds can be found.  
 
Infirmary: (see Infirmary).
 
Gatehouse: (c. 150 yards (H80)) north west of the Abbey site.  The lower vaulted chamber has been used as a coal house for the Wesleyan Chapel.  There is a pier and spring of an archway to the gateway on the north wall of the gatehouse (WARD).

Locally known as the Gaol, very delapidated in 1730 (HOPE).

Square head and chamfered jambs of remaining windows suggest 15th or 16th century.
The upper storey was used as a Methodist chapel until the present chapel was built in 1902.  Later it was used as a bakehouse and contained an oven and copper.  Until the winter of 1935/6 when the oven collapsed, the meat for the Whitson Feast of the Dale Abbey Society for the Prosecution of Felons continued to be cooked here, the plum pudding being baked in the copper (C43).
 
Approaches to gatehouse:  mounds in the field north of the gatehouse

Tilekiln:  found near the gatehouse (see Tiles).