All Hallows Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Bristol, City of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 December 1994. Hall. 6 related planning applications.

All Hallows Hall

WRENN ID
burning-stronghold-poplar
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bristol, City of
Country
England
Date first listed
30 December 1994
Type
Hall
Source
Historic England listing

Description

All Hallows Hall is a parish hall, now used as a warehouse, built in 1911 by Oatley and Lawrence. It is constructed of pennant rubble with limestone dressings, and has a tiled roof. The building is in the Perpendicular Gothic Revival style, incorporating Arts and Crafts details. The gable end features single-storey crenellated porches flanking square towers that project slightly forward. Above them is a shallow gable with a cornice and Tudor flowers. Gargoyles are positioned at the corners, and the parapet is crenellated. A steeper roof gable lies behind, coped and featuring a panel with blind lancet windows and quatrefoils. The outer doorways have two-leaf battened doors set within Tudor arches, framed by tall moulded surrounds with three-pane overlights beneath a cornice. The gable has a large four-centred arched window divided into three by buttressed mullions, a central doorway between the buttresses, and a rectangular frame with an uncarved hood moulding above. A cornice and coped panel displays "ALL HALLOWS HALL" in raised letters. Deep, weathered cills run along the sides of two-light windows, with a central five-light window above the doorway featuring Y tracery. A band of blind windows sits between the transoms. Small windows are located at the bases of the towers. The returns feature four three-light Tudor-arched windows. The interior remains uninspected. This hall is one of several in Bristol from the same era and is more finely detailed and decorated than many others.

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.