Hazelford Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Peak District National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 July 1967. House.

Hazelford Hall

WRENN ID
winter-render-elder
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Peak District National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
12 July 1967
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Hazelford Hall is a house dating from the 17th century, with significant renovations and additions made in the 19th century. It is constructed from coursed rubble gritstone, featuring quoins, coped gables, and moulded kneelers. The gable ends have ashlar stacks with diagonally set coupled chimneys, primarily from the 19th century, along with one cluster of four chimneys. The roof is covered with stone slates. The building has an irregular 'L' shape, consisting of a stepped range to the east and a northern range with 19th-century additions.

The east range has a west elevation that is two storeys high and consists of four bays, arranged into two stepped units of two bays, with the northern end obscured by the northern range. It features two four-light recessed chamfer mullioned windows, each with a major mullion and separated by a narrow masonry pier, all beneath a continuous hoodmould with stops. Above these are later two-light openings with flush surrounds and hollow chamfer mullions. The windows have ornamental cast iron casements and fixed lights. There is a doorway at the north end with a shallow arch lintel, a quoined surround, and a hoodmould with stops above, leading to a plain planked door. The lower two-storey range continues to the north with a two-light recessed chamfer mullioned window on the first floor and a single light opening below.

The north range has a west elevation featuring a four-light recessed chamfer mullioned window on the ground floor, with central major mullions and asymmetrically placed flanking mullions linked to the major mullion by short transoms, all beneath a hoodmould with stops. Above this is a five-light chamfer mullioned window with a hoodmould and stops. There is also a three-light chamfer mullioned window in the basement. The south elevation is gabled and includes a hollow chamfer mullioned window. The north elevation of the northern range features a mid-19th-century two-storey gabled porch with a jettied upper storey supported by stone corbels. The dressings on this elevation, along with the chimneys, copings, and finials, appear to date from the mid-19th century.

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