House The house is built of
magnesian limestone with some concrete, and has roofs of Welsh
slate and lead. There are two storeys and a basement, and an approximately H-shaped plan. The south front has 13
bays, consisting of a central range of five bays, flanked by two projecting bays and two recessed bays. It has a
chamfered
plinth, and an
embattled parapet. A flight of steps with a decorative iron
balustrade leads up to the central doorway that has
Roman Doric columns, a pattered
fanlight, a
fluted frieze, and a
dentilled
pediment. The windows are 20th-century
casements. At the rear is a tower, and an
arcade of blind round arches. Inside, the great hall has a window which is probably 13th century, and at the rear of the hall is a staircase which is likely to be 14th century. The great hall, drawing room, dining room and staircase hall are decorated in neo-classical style, as are some rooms on the upper floor. The kitchen has remains of an early fireplace in a 17th-century opening, and there is another 17th-century fireplace in the rear kitchen. Several rooms have interiors moved from elsewhere in the 1960s, including the Flemish Panelled Room, with decoration created in the 1670s for the Carmelite Church in
Ghent and a fireplace and
overmantel from Eaton Old Hall; and probable 16th-century bookcases in the library.
Groom's House The Groom's House, stable and wall were built in the mid or late 18th century, and are collectively grade II listed. The buildings are constructed of magnesian limestone with a grey
slate roof. The house has two storeys and five
bays, a
plinth, an
impost band, a sill band, an
eaves band and a
hipped roof. The ground floor has an
arcade containing a central doorway and round-headed windows, and on the upper floor are
sash windows with flat heads. There are adjoining walls, and on the south side is a
Tudor arched carriage entrance.
Stable The former stables, later converted into a guest house, were built in the mid or late 18th century, and are also grade II listed, together with an adjoining wall. The building is built of magnesian limestone on a
plinth, with a projecting
eaves bands, and a
hipped Welsh
slate roof. There are two storeys and eight
bays, the middle four bays projecting under a
pediment containing a circular
sundial. The second and seventh bays contain flat-headed doorway with patterned
fanlights. The windows are
sashes, those on the ground floor of the middle four bays with round-arched heads, and the others with flat heads. To the west is a wall containing a round-arched opening within a larger arch with
imposts and a
cornice.
Folly The grade II-listed late-18th century
folly is in magnesian limestone, on a
plinth, and it has a continuous sill band, a
cornice, and an
embattled parapet. There is an octagonal plan, and it contains two doorways, one with a
trefoil head and blocked, and the other later with a straight head. Between the doorways are blocked trefoil-headed windows, and above are blind
oculi. ==See also==