The Woodclyffe Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Wokingham local planning authority area, England. First listed on 23 December 1983. Meeting hall. 5 related planning applications.
The Woodclyffe Hall
- WRENN ID
- open-hall-sorrel
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wokingham
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 23 December 1983
- Type
- Meeting hall
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Woodclyffe Hall is a meeting hall dating from 1901 to 1902, designed by Cole A. Adams. The ground floor is constructed of brick and stone, with pebble-dashed and coloured rendering above. The building has a gabled tiled roof with a large bargeboard, a dropped finial, and a wood-louvred bell tower set back on the ridge. The bell tower has a zinc-covered ogee roof topped with a weather vane set on a vertical tile-hung base.
The front facade features a large, central, five-bay oriel window above the ground floor. The oriel has leaded lights, with the centre and end bays semi-circular and incorporating a moulded transome and a moulded dentilled cornice. The letters "The Woodclyffe Hall" are inscribed on the apron of the oriel. Below the oriel is a five-light leaded window with stone mullions, and a glazed red brick panel. There are recessed openings with moulded stone pointed arched porches leading to entrances on either side. To the right is a pair of six-panelled doors, and to the left a single panelled door and a single leaded window.
Detailed Attributes
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