Hutton Hall, Conservatory, Kitchen Courtyard And Gatehouse is a Grade II listed building in the North York Moors National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 April 1984. Mansion.

Hutton Hall, Conservatory, Kitchen Courtyard And Gatehouse

WRENN ID
iron-vault-sepia
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North York Moors National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
25 April 1984
Type
Mansion
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Hutton Hall is a large country mansion set in a landscaped park, built in 1866, designed by Alfred Waterhouse for J.W. Pease. The building features red brick with stone dressings and steeply pitched hipped and gabled roofs covered in Welsh slate, adorned with ornamental cast iron ridge crestings. There are 13 stacks made of banded brick and stone, showcasing a High Victorian Gothic style. The mansion has two storeys and a principal south elevation that displays a balanced asymmetry across seven bays. Notable projections include an octagonal and pyramidal roof at the first bay, and rectangular and gabled roofs at the fourth and seventh bays. A narrow slate canopy supported by timber brackets runs between the first and second floors across several bays. The windows are sash style with stone mullions and irregular quoin surrounds, while there are attic gablets on the second and sixth bays, a gabled dormer on the third bay, and relieving arches above the first-floor windows of the fifth and sixth bays. The seventh bay features a canted oriel window with corbelling underneath. The entrance is located at the rear in a single-storey gabled porch with a moulded equilateral arch.

Adjoining the east side of Hutton Hall is a large dilapidated conservatory, which is contemporary with the hall. It is built of brick with stone dressings and has a glazed roof that has largely collapsed. The conservatory is asymmetrical, featuring segmental-arched openings and pinnacles on a pierced parapet. Inside, there is a double arcade of semi-circular arches supported by twisted fluted columns.

To the northeast of Hutton Hall is a kitchen courtyard that includes a Gothic Tudor gatehouse with a circular bartizan on the right-hand side. The interior of Hutton Hall remains largely unaltered, with two principal reception rooms that have plaster panelled ceilings. There is a pointed arcade connecting the inner hall to an open-well staircase, and contemporary stained and painted glass windows can be found in the western and northern elevations.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Boundary Walls to Garden and Entrance Court of Hutton Hall Grade II 55 m
  2. Former stable, garden and ancillary buildings to Hutton Hall Grade II 102 m
  3. Stables, Cart Shed, Granary, Barn and Loose Boxes, to East of Home Farmhouse Grade II* 381 m
  4. Estate Office, Former Joiner's Workshop to West of Home Farmhouse Grade II* 435 m
  5. Boundary Wall South of Highcliff Farmhouse Grade II 1.5 km
  6. 187, Westgate Grade II 1.6 km
  7. 185, Westgate Grade II 1.6 km
  8. 181, Westgate Grade II 1.6 km
  9. 134 and 136, Westgate Grade II 1.6 km
  10. 147, 149, 151 and 153, Westgate Grade II 1.7 km