Caley Hall Farm House is a Grade II listed building in the King0s Lynn and West Norfolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 June 1951. Farm house, hotel.

Caley Hall Farm House

WRENN ID
far-nave-owl
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
King0s Lynn and West Norfolk
Country
England
Date first listed
6 June 1951
Type
Farm house, hotel
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Caley Hall Farm House is a former farm house that has been converted into a hotel. It is dated 1648 on the south gable. The original house, which faces east, is two storeys high with attics and has additions on the west and north sides that form an "L" shape. The main structure to the east is built of knapped flint with galleting and some carstone on the south and east fronts, featuring brick dressings and tiled roofs.

There is an off-centre two-storey gabled porch with a cement rendered entrance that has a four-centre arch, a 20th-century infill door, and a casement window above it. The south return of the porch has a blocked first-floor brick-dressed 17th-century window. On the south side, there is a single bay with a ground floor three-light casement and a first floor two-light casement. The north side features two ground floor three-light casements and two first floor two-light casements, all of which are 20th-century with glazing bars.

The south returned gable has one ground floor three-light casement and a first floor and gable single two-light casement. The house has a datestone and carstone parapet copings. The east porch, south bay, and gable are of one build, with 17th-century brick dressings up to three-quarters of the height of the gable. The north bays are constructed from rubble carstone, flint, and brick, with the north gable made of squared and coursed carstone with brick dressings. There is one gabled dormer with a two-light cross window with glazing bars and a ridge axial stack with four shafts from the mid-19th century.

To the north, at right angles to the main house, is a two-storey service wing with one ground floor and three first floor casements with glazing bars, some 17th-century brick dressings, and part of mid-19th-century shaft stacks on the ridge. Continuing east is an attached 17th-century two-storey cottage made of chalk, which has two ground floor and two first floor blocked 17th-century windows with brick dressings, a blocked central door with an inserted two-light casement, a brick coped gable, and an east end stack. To the west, there are two mid-19th-century two-storey gabled wings at right angles to the main house, constructed of carstone on the south and west sides, with pantiled roofs.

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