and south gates
Cholmondeley Castle is a
grade-II*-listed castellated mansion house located at , from
Malpas and from
Nantwich. The sandstone building dates from 1801 to 1804; turrets and towers were added in 1817–19 by
Robert Smirke to give the "castle" its present appearance. The surviving parts of the grade-II-listed Old Hall date from 1707; the hall formerly included an Elizabethan building which was demolished in 1801. ;Parkland The parkland of the castle was originally laid out in the late 17th century, and is included in the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens (grade II). The gates at the south-west entrance to the park date from 1722 and are listed at grade II*. The castle gardens contain several grade-II-listed structures; Temple Gardens has a sandstone temple, a lead statue of three winged cherubs supporting a flower basket, a rotunda, a stone bridge over a lily pond carved with dolphins and a gated entrance; the stone bridge across Chapel Mere is also listed. ;Chapel The
castle's private chapel, dedicated to St Nicholas, is of a much earlier date and is listed at grade I. The original
timber-framed building dates from the late 15th century; it was rebuilt in brick in 1717 by
John Vanbrugh and extended during the 19th century.
John Betjeman suggests that the attribution to Vanbrugh is incorrect since Thomas Fetherston contracted for the work in 1716. The transepts were added in 1829. The chancel roof is medieval and the furniture of the chancel is of about 1552. The north and south gates to the chapel date from 1722 and were formerly fences to the Old Hall; they are listed at grade II. ;Gate lodges The park has five grade-II-listed gate lodges, Beeston Lodge, Deer Park Lodge, Nantwich Lodge, Park House Lodge and Somerset Lodge. Other estate buildings also listed at grade II include Castle Farm House, Park House, Scotch Farm, Shingles Cottages and The Mews. ==Other landmarks==