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Historic England, "The Old Hall and attached outbuildings and boundary wall, House and attached walls, East Bridgford (1243772)", National Heritage List for England Historic England, "Walnut Lodge and adjoining stables, East Bridgford (1243773)" , National Heritage List for England , retrieved 19 April 2023
Wikidata has entry The Old Hall And Attached Outbuilding And Boundary Wall (Q26536437) with data related to this item. Licensing This image was taken from the Geograph project collection.
East Bridgford is a village and civil parish in the Rushcliffe borough of Nottinghamshire, east of the city of Nottingham. It had a population of 1,814 at the 2011 census, [1] falling to 1,763 at the 2021 census. [2] The village adjoins the south bank of the River Trent, opposite the village of Gunthorpe. It is on the Trent Valley Way. East ...
A parish hall designed by Alfred John Thraves in Arts and Crafts style. It is in red brick with dressings in plum and red brick and tile-creasing, and a tile roof that sweeps down to ground floor level and is half-hipped at the gable ends. There is a single storey and attics, and a rectangular plan with an east front of seven bays.
Rufford Old Hall is a National Trust property in Rufford, Lancashire, England. Built in about 1530 for Sir Robert Hesketh, only the Great Hall survives from the original structure. [ 1 ] A brick-built wing in the Jacobean style was added in 1661, at right angles to the Great Hall, and a third wing was added in the 1820s.
Edwalton Hall, the largest, was once the residence of the Chaworth family and is now an exclusive complex of mews houses and apartments. For a time it became a hotel and restaurant, before being developed by Crosby Homes. Today it includes a gym, swimming pool and croquet lawn. In recent years developers have laid out new housing estates in the ...
The tower, as depicted on a map from 1610. Since at least the Middle Ages, a hall has stood on this site by the warm spring for which Buxton water is known. The oldest part of the current building was once part of a four-storey fortified tower, built in 1572 by Bess of Hardwick and her fourth husband, George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury.
The hotel has three storeys, three bays on the east front, three on the south front, and a two-storey, three-bay rear wing. On the east front is a porch with Tuscan columns, and two gables with pierced bargeboards. The former town hall project slightly, it has two storeys, three bays, and a hipped roof.