Tybroughton Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Wrexham local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 20 October 2005. House. 1 related planning application.

Tybroughton Hall

WRENN ID
carved-moat-alder
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Wrexham
Country
Wales
Date first listed
20 October 2005
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Tybroughton Hall is a Georgian house that stands two storeys high with an attic and features a three-bay front. The exterior is made of pebble-dashed brick walls and has a slate roof with sawtooth eaves and end stacks. The entrance, added in the 19th century, is located on the left gable end, next to the stack. It includes an open porch supported by wooden posts, a half-lit panel door, and a three-pane overlight. Above the door is a small-pane window that has been replaced.

The main three-bay front features a 19th-century canted bay window on the left, which is shown on the 1873 Ordnance Survey map, and has 12-pane hornless sash windows. In the center, there is another 12-pane horned sash window that replaced the original entrance, and to the right, a wider 16-pane window. The upper storey mirrors this arrangement with a 12-pane central window and 16-pane outer windows, all of which are horned sashes.

On the right gable end, there is a lean-to with a half-lit door. Above this, the wall is brick and includes a casement window on the left side in the upper storey, along with two 2-light attic windows.

At the rear, there is a parallel mid to late 19th-century wing that aligns with the gable end of the main house. This wing features a canted bay with a 16-pane sash window and two windows above that have been replaced in their original openings with 12-pane top-hung casements. The rear elevation includes a 12-pane sash window on the lower right and a projecting gabled bay on the left side with large small-pane windows. The return wall is a later addition, likely from around 1900, made of brick with small-pane casement windows above lean-tos against the rear and gable end of the main range.

Originally, the house was symmetrically planned with an entrance vestibule. The interior was remodeled in the mid to late 19th century when the new entrance was created, leading into a stair hall with a simple straight stair. The interior has been modernized more recently but still retains part of a pulley system with trap doors leading to an upper-storey cheese room, a feature that was once common in the area.

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