The Hall The Old Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Erewash local planning authority area, England. House.
The Hall The Old Hall
- WRENN ID
- errant-eave-sage
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Erewash
- Country
- England
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Hall and the Old Hall, located in Little Hallam, is a house that has been divided into two separate residences. It dates from the early 17th century and early 18th century. The building features a timber frame with brick infill and red brick, topped with plain tile roofs. It has one brick coped gable with plain kneelers, as well as brick gable and ridge stacks. The structure consists of a 17th-century box-framed range linked to a parallel 18th-century L-plan range, standing two to three storeys high.
The 17th-century box-framed range is two storeys tall with three bays, and the framing is exposed on the north, west, and south sides. It has curved diagonal braces, with the west elevation displaying two irregularly placed 20th-century casement windows on the ground floor. The first floor features a 20th-century casement window and a Yorkshire sliding sash. The north elevation has two sliding sashes, while the south side has larger 19th and 20th-century windows. There is a brick bay on the northeast with a recessed porch that has a round-arched entrance and a 17th-century panelled door.
Inside, the building showcases exposed beams and a single purlin roof with arched braces. The Hall, which is attached to the east, is an L-plan structure made of brick with a dentil eaves cornice and first and second-floor dentil bands. The east elevation has three bays, along with a single-storey range to the south that features a glazing bar sash and an early 19th-century wooden doorcase with a panelled door. The main part to the right has two glazing bar sashes under wedge brick lintels on the ground floor, three glazing bar sashes above, and a small 20th-century window and a two-light casement window on the top floor. The interior of the ground floor southwest room is said to contain Elizabethan or Jacobean panelling divided by fluted pilasters, a two-panel chimneypiece, and fitted early Georgian cupboards with shaped shelves.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- Sale history — 2 transactions since 2022
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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