Airmyn Hall is a Grade II listed building in the East Riding of Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 June 1994. Country house. 4 related planning applications.
Airmyn Hall
- WRENN ID
- solemn-cupola-elder
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- East Riding of Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 13 June 1994
- Type
- Country house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Small country house, now divided into 3 houses. Early 18th century, remodelled around 1770 and altered in the late 19th century. Red brick with ashlar dressings, pantile roofs and 5 brick stacks. Two storeys.
The west street front comprises a 5-window main block plus 4-window service wing. The main block has a first floor band, moulded eaves and thin brick pilaster strips which divide the facade in the proportion 1:1:2. To the left are a single and 2 plain sashes, then a 20th-century door with overlight and a 20th-century window to the right, with 5 plain sashes above. The wing to the right also has pilaster strips dividing the facade 1:2:1, with a 20th-century window then 2 and a single glazing bar sash. Above are 4 glazing bar sashes, and a single dormer above with 2-light casement. To the left are 2 19th-century canted bay windows all with plain sashes, and beyond a 20th-century extension.
The east garden front has 5 windows. A taller central canted bay window contains central double glazed doors and overlight in the former sash window, with single plain sashes on either side. Beyond are 2 large plain sashes on each side. Above are 3 plain sashes to the canted bay with smaller single sashes on either side. To the right is a set back 2-window 19th-century wing with plain sashes. An irregular set back former service wing lies to the left.
The interior contains a fine central reception room with moulded coving, dado panelling, plaster panels, 2 wooden doorcases and a fireplace plus 2 ornate plaster niches, all dating to around 1770. Another ground floor room has similar dado panelling and doorcase plus a wooden fireplace, with panelling made from box pews from the local church, probably inserted in the late 19th century. A 3-flight dog leg staircase has 2 turned balusters per tread, plaster panels and dado panelling. The upper floor has 18th-century shutters and doorcases with mostly 19th-century fireplaces.
Detailed Attributes
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.