Mundon Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Maldon local planning authority area, England. First listed on 1 December 1999. Farmhouse.
Mundon Hall
- WRENN ID
- slow-vestry-violet
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Maldon
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 1 December 1999
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Mundon Hall is a farmhouse dating from around 1760, with a front block added around 1870 and the interiors remodeled. The building is constructed from rendered and whitewashed brick, featuring a slate roof on the front elevation and plain tiles on the rear wing.
The west elevation, which dates from around 1870, is two storeys high and has a three-window range. It includes pilaster strips at the corners and in the center, along with a square central porch topped with a coved parapet. The ground floor has two 2/4 unhorned sash windows in raised surrounds, while the first floor features three 2/2 unhorned sashes with similar surrounds. There are external stacks on the returns and on the front roof slope.
The rear elevation, dating from around 1760, is also two storeys with a dormer attic and has a three-window range. The ground floor includes a projecting single-storey bay at the north end, which contains a late 18th-century tripartite sash window with a configuration of 2/2:8/8:2/2 panes. The first floor has two 6/6 flush-framed 18th-century sashes and one late 20th-century lancet light. The mansard roof features two gabled dormers fitted with 20th-century 2-light casements, and there is an external stack on the north gable of the east roof slope.
There is a single-storey late 19th-century extension to the east at the south end, which has two 2/2 unhorned sashes on the west side and an external stack on the east gable end. The south return includes an 18th-century two-storey gabled staircase tower, which has a round-headed first-floor window with stained glass and a 6-paned attic casement. To the east, there is an oversailing extension supported by one timber post, with a second post added in the late 20th century. There is one 6/6 unhorned sash on the first floor.
Inside, the 19th-century front block features four-panelled internal doors. The north front room has a marble chimneypiece with a cast-iron insert, while the south room has a slate chimneypiece and panelled window shutters. The 18th-century staircase rises to the attic in separate single flights, with a closed string, turned balusters, and chamfered square newels with moulded caps. There are also four-panelled doors and shutters to the windows, and the rear extension includes a marble chimneypiece.
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