Hall Place is a Grade II listed building in the Test Valley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 April 1986. Farmhouse. 4 related planning applications.
Hall Place
- WRENN ID
- haunted-pilaster-weasel
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Test Valley
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 11 April 1986
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Hall Place is a farmhouse with a core dating back to the 16th century, significantly altered in the 18th and 20th centuries. It's constructed with a timber frame encased in brick, with the addition of brickwork and extensions. The roof is covered in old plain tiles. The house originally comprised a three-bay and smoke bay building with a contemporary crosswing positioned in front of the right bay and an 18th-century wing extending to the rear of the left bay.
The front of the house features a four-panel door set beneath a semi-circular fanlight, positioned within a flat-roofed porch. This porch continues an 18th-century outshot to the right of the central bay and the right side of the crosswing. A two-light casement window is present in the outshot. On both floors of the left bay are three-light casement windows, and another three-light casement is located above the door. The crosswing has a hipped dormer with two lights on the outshot, and a single light window at the end. The gable features a plinth, offset windows, two twelve-pane sash windows and a one- and three-light casement window above. Above these is the tiebeam and gable frame of the original 16th-century structure. The roof is hipped to the left, with a ridge stack above the door and two projecting stacks on the right-side wall of the crosswing. This building has group value from the contribution it makes to the local vernacular architecture.
Detailed Attributes
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