White Hart Hotel is a Grade II listed building in the Lincoln local planning authority area, England. First listed on 2 October 1969. Hotel. 23 related planning applications.

White Hart Hotel

WRENN ID
vacant-terrace-cedar
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Lincoln
Country
England
Date first listed
2 October 1969
Type
Hotel
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The White Hart Hotel is a hotel located in Lincoln, dated 1722, with a refronting in 1844 and further additions and alterations around 1900, 1938, and 1962, the last of which was carried out by Watkins, Coombes & Partners. The building is constructed of brick with a channelled stucco ground floor, stone dressings, and plain tile roofs, featuring coped parapets.

On the Bailgate side, the left section showcases an 18th-century, three-storey front with three bays. It has a central panelled stucco doorcase beneath a flat leaded canopy, flanked by single tripartite sash windows. Above are three tall glazing bar sashes with bracketed pedimented surrounds, with the outer two featuring iron balconies. Above these are three smaller glazing bar sashes. To the right, an addition from around 1900 stands four storeys plus attics, with four bays and a moulded cornice. The first and second floors have French windows with balconies, with segmental heads on the first floor openings and flat arches with keystones above. A 1962 addition to the right is four storeys and two bays, designed in a simpler version of the same style.

The north gable, dating from the 18th century, features a pedimented sash window with a balcony on the first floor and a large bracket clock topped with a figure of a hart. On the Eastgate side, the former stables to the right are two storeys high with seven bays, moulded brick bands, and eaves. To the left, there is a canopied doorway and three plain sashes, with seven segment-headed sashes above.

A 1938 addition to the left is in Neo-Georgian style, made of brick, three storeys high with five bays. It has a central basket-arched carriage opening flanked by single metal-framed windows with rusticated surrounds. Above this, there is a central pedimented window with a balcony, flanked by two windows with cornices and pediments, and above again, five segment-headed windows.

The interior was refitted in the early and mid-20th century and includes a set of early 20th-century revolving doors.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2022
  • Related listed building consents — 23 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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