Skendleby Hall is a Grade II listed building in the East Lindsey local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 April 1987. House.

Skendleby Hall

WRENN ID
tenth-rubblework-snow
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
East Lindsey
Country
England
Date first listed
22 April 1987
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Skendleby Hall is a house built in the mid-18th century, with extensions and alterations from the mid and late 19th century and early 20th century. It is constructed of red brick and features a slate roof. The building has an L-plan layout and is two storeys high with an attic. The north wing has four bays and includes two segmental arched openings that now contain large doorways with plank doors and concrete lintels, above which are single tripartite casement overlights. To the right, there are two glazing bar sash windows, with four similar sashes above, all set under segmental arches. The attic features three gabled wooden roof dormers, each with a single glazing bar sash.

Attached to the left of the main structure is a late 19th-century tower made of red brick with some blue brick diapering. This tower has a hipped slate roof topped with a wooden bell turret that has arched openings and a pyramidal slate roof, resting on a fishscale slate base. The tower has dentil eaves and is divided into three stages, with a single rectangular narrow light in each stage.

The south wing, which projects from the main building, has five bays and is two storeys high. It features a gabled, coped mid-19th-century porch with dentil eaves, a first-floor band, and a plinth. The porch has a segmental arched doorway with double doors, and the side walls each have a single blocked arched opening. To the left of the porch are two glazing bar sashes with single blind recessed panels underneath. To the right, there is a two-storey 20th-century projecting bay with two glazing bar sashes on each floor. The porch also has a single arched fixed light on the first floor, with two glazing bar sashes and similar panels to the left. Above the porch are three similar roof dormers. Attached to the right and set back is a 19th-century cross wing with a shaped gable, from which projects a single-storey late 19th-century porch featuring a panelled door, overlight, and single pilasters supporting brackets and a hood, with single narrow recessed shaped blind panels on either side.

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