Hall Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the King0s Lynn and West Norfolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 9 October 1985. Farmhouse. 5 related planning applications.
Hall Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- veiled-granite-amber
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- King0s Lynn and West Norfolk
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 9 October 1985
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Hall Farmhouse is a farmhouse dating from about 1600, with some alterations and additions from about 1800. It is constructed primarily of flint with brick headers and dressings, with a later addition of red brick. The roof is pantiled. The original building was two storeys high, but a third storey was added around 1800. The farmhouse has seven bays. The front of the house has three sash windows on the south side and one on the north side on the ground floor, all with glazing bars. A 20th-century French door is located on the north side. An off-centre porch, built of herringbone brick, dates from about 1600 and is incorporated into a two-bay, two-storey wing constructed around 1800. The original porch has a plastered door architrave with a four-centred arch framed by pilasters with finials and a central pediment. The interior of the porch is stucco rendered, and it contains a six-panel raised and fielded door with a wreathed hand knocker. A two-bay addition from about 1800 features a part-glazed door and two first-floor sash windows. The gabled roof has wooden modillion eaves cornices. The original building has three first-floor sash windows with glazing bars on the south side and two on the north. There are also four second-floor sash windows with glazing bars. A blocked, rectangular 17th-century window is visible on the south side at first floor level. The south gable has an external brick stack, plastered over. On the north gable, there are two ground-floor and two first-floor rectangular windows, blocked, and one blocked first and one blocked second floor brick dressed rectangular window. The roof line of the original building is visible. Features include 17th-century brick rusticated angles and an 18th-century wooden modillion eaves cornice. The garden front has one blocked ground-floor 17th-century fire window on the north side. An off-centre, two-storey gable from about 1600 is plastered and has an 18th-century brick gable with wooden modillion eaves cornices.
Detailed Attributes
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