Paskeston Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 14 May 1970. Bridge. 2 related planning applications.

Paskeston Hall

WRENN ID
woven-railing-jackdaw
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Pembrokeshire Coast National Park
Country
Wales
Date first listed
14 May 1970
Type
Bridge
Source
Cadw listing

Description

Paskeston Hall is a house dating from the early 18th century, with a large, double-roofed rear wing. It faces west towards the approach drive. The original part of the house is two storeys high plus an attic, and has three windows on its front elevation, with a prominent central section that projects forward. The walls are built of rubble masonry, rendered and painted a light grey colour. The roof is slate-covered, with a hipped extension over the advanced section, characterized by a deep eaves projection at the front. Large sash windows, each with 12 panes, feature recessed frames and thin glazing bars.

In the 19th century, a substantial extension was built to the south. This extension is two storeys high, roughcast, and painted light grey. It has a low-pitched slate roof with projecting eaves supported by brackets. The extension now forms the dominant mass of the building, with the original house acting as a north wing. A separate entrance faces west, but the garden front, facing south, is the most visually striking, featuring a large, segmental bow in the centre. The garden front windows are also sash windows with 12 panes. The windows in the bow, and the ground floor windows on either side, are tripartite sashes. All windows have internal shutters. A flat-roofed entrance porch and a timber and glass conservatory, both added in the late 19th century, extend along the west front.

According to a description from the 1970s, the interior of the earlier part of the house includes an early 18th-century staircase with square newels and capping, turned balusters, and a close string. A first-floor mantel is decorated with a dentil cornice, while simpler mantels of the same style are found on the second floor. Ground-floor doors have six sunk panels, while upper-floor doors feature two fielded panels. Panelled window shutters are also present.

Detailed Attributes

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