Flasby Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Yorkshire Dales National Park local planning authority area, England. House.
Flasby Hall
- WRENN ID
- gentle-tracery-aspen
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Yorkshire Dales National Park
- Country
- England
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Flasby Hall is a large house built around 1843-1844, possibly designed by George Webster of Kendal. It is constructed from sandstone ashlar and features a slate roof in the Italianate style. Originally, the building had two storeys and nine bays, along with an attached three-storey tower, but it was partially demolished around 1979 and now has two storeys and four bays.
The asymmetrical entrance front faces north and has two storeys with three bays. A projecting entrance porch is located left of centre and features a massive Gibbs surround with flanking pilasters and a two-leaf, three-panel door. The left-hand ground floor window has sill brackets, while the right-hand ground floor and upper floor windows have moulded architraves and an upper floor sill band. The left of centre upper floor window has a projecting eared architrave, and there is a left-hand upper floor Venetian window. All windows are sashes except for the Venetian window, which has fixed lights. The right-hand side has quoins, and the remaining bays to the left have been demolished.
The right-hand gable end is two storeys with three bays. It features a projecting central pedimented bay with a ground floor French window that has a moulded architrave and consoles to the hood. The upper floor has a two-light round-headed window with moulded arches set within a recessed panel, along with eight-pane sashes. There is a blind round-headed window with rusticated voussoirs within the tympanum. Flanking windows on both the ground and upper floors have moulded surrounds and sashes, with hoods and sill brackets on the ground floor and a sill band on the upper floor. The gable end also has chamfered quoins and modillions to the cornice and tympanum.
The garden front, facing south, has two storeys and four bays, featuring a projecting right-hand entrance porch with round-headed, two-leaf, three-panel doors and a fanlight. There are three ground floor and four upper floor windows with moulded surrounds and sashes, along with hoods and sill brackets on the ground floor and a sill band on the upper floor. The remaining bays to the right have been demolished. Inside, the hall contains a geometrical staircase with iron stick balusters and a wreathed handrail.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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