Brockley Hall is a Grade II listed building in the North Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 October 1952. Country house. 5 related planning applications.
Brockley Hall
- WRENN ID
- salt-mortar-jet
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Somerset
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 13 October 1952
- Type
- Country house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Brockley Hall is a country house, originally containing 13 flats at the time of its listing. It was built in the late 18th century and remodelled around 1825 in a simple Greek Revival style for J.H. Smyth-Pigott. The exterior is rendered, with lines indicating the original layout, and has slate roofs behind a coped parapet. A moulded cornice runs along the top, and there are rendered stacks. The house has two floors and cellars, with a five-bay central section flanked by recessed strips and setback corner strips. The windows are sash windows with 12 or eight panes of glazing bar, set within moulded architraves, and there is a plain band above the first floor. A projecting Doric portico features a flat entablature, a triglyph frieze, and four fluted columns, supporting a six-panel door with an overlight and an antique panel above. The north-east wing has eight similar windows and a hipped mansard roof with eight dormers. Internally, the house is said to contain a staircase with a twisted baluster design.
Detailed Attributes
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