Coggers Hall is a Grade II* listed building in the Tunbridge Wells local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 October 1954. House. 5 related planning applications.

Coggers Hall

WRENN ID
high-oriel-equinox
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Tunbridge Wells
Country
England
Date first listed
20 October 1954
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Coggers Hall is a house dating from the mid- to late 16th century, originally built or rebuilt for the Thomas family, who were wealthy iron masters. It is a timber-framed building with exposed close studding and plaster infill, featuring a plain tiled roof. The house is a continuous jettied structure of four bays. It has two storeys and a garret, with a moulded bresummer to the jetty. The roof is gabled, with a small, central moulded stack, a large moulded stack at the left end, and a freestanding, offset stone stack at the right end, featuring three moulded round brick flues. The windows are leaded cross windows; the first floor has four, and the ground floor has three, with a small leaded light to the left end. A 20-panelled rib and stud door sits in a moulded surround with a rectangular fanlight. The interior includes mid-rail panelled partition walls, chamfered cross-beamed ceilings, stone fireplaces with label hoods, and wainscotting. Several mullioned openings are blocked.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.