Nunriding Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Northumberland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 January 1986. House. 5 related planning applications.
Nunriding Hall
- WRENN ID
- still-thatch-furze
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Northumberland
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 30 January 1986
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Nunriding Hall is a house, now divided into three separate dwellings, dating from the 17th century or earlier, with significant remodelling in the mid-18th century. The east block is constructed of squared stone, while the west block is of rubble construction, with dressed stone detailing. Both have slate roofs. The garden front is divided into two parts. The right-hand part is two storeys high with a symmetrical five-bay arrangement. It features a renewed central front door set within a raised stone surround, with a recessed panel above. The windows are 18-pane sashes in raised stone surrounds with narrow chamfers. The roof is pitched steeply and has stone stacks at each end. The left-hand part of the front is slightly lower, also two storeys high and with five bays. It features a centrally placed pair of doors set within 20th-century surrounds that replicate the design of the front door on the right-hand part. The windows are similar to those on the right-hand part, though the remains of older mullioned windows can be seen, now blocked. A moulded eaves cornice runs along the building, and a rebuilt brick stack sits on an older stone base at the left-hand end. The moulded eaves cornice continues as a coping to the left return gable. A single-storey outbuilding to the left has a blocked door with a chamfered alternate-block surround. Later outshuts and additions to the rear of the property are not considered to be of architectural importance.
Detailed Attributes
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