Kilsby Hall is a Grade II listed building in the West Northamptonshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 March 1987. House.
Kilsby Hall
- WRENN ID
- worn-flint-moss
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- West Northamptonshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 11 March 1987
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Kilsby Hall is a house dating from the late 17th century, with expansions made in the 18th century. A datestone on the right side indicates the year 1764 and the initials CJA. The building has a T-plan layout, featuring a wing that projects to the right of the center at the rear. It is constructed of coursed squared ironstone and has an artificial stone slate roof, along with stone and rendered stacks. The house has two storeys, an attic, and a cellar, with a total of five bays.
The cellar window, located in the second bay from the left, has two lights with a stone mullion and a moulded surround. The doorway, positioned to the right of center, features plain stone pilasters, a wooden pediment, and a six-panel door with panelled reveals and an overlight with intersecting glazing bars. To the right of this entrance is a 20th-century round window with a plain stone surround. The right bay and the second bay from the right each have two 19th-century four-pane sash windows under the same wooden lintel, while the left side has similar sash windows in the left bay and the second bay from the left on the first floor. Above the entrance, there is an eight-pane sash window.
The gable ends are coped with kneelers, and on the left side, there are three-light stone-mullioned windows with straight moulded hoods on both the ground and first floors, along with a similar two-light window in the attic (the ground floor window is blocked). There is a squared staircase projection with a hipped roof on the right side at the rear, which contains 17th-century one-light windows with moulded stone surrounds on both the ground and first floors. The rear wing, also from the 17th century, uses similar materials and has two storeys with three bays, a six-panel door with a wooden lintel and panelled reveals, and casement windows with wooden lintels, topped by a coped gable end.
Inside, the 17th-century section of the house to the left of the entrance features a set of stop-chamfered beams and an open fireplace in the ground floor room, along with a moulded spine beam and plain joists in the kitchen. There is an old closed well staircase on the left side, and the main staircase from the 18th century has turned balusters and a curved handrail.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
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- Flood risk assessment
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