History in Structure

Langar Hall Including East West Range Adjoining and to North East

A Grade II Listed Building in Langar cum Barnstone, Nottinghamshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.9045 / 52°54'16"N

Longitude: -0.9296 / 0°55'46"W

OS Eastings: 472090

OS Northings: 334653

OS Grid: SK720346

Mapcode National: GBR BM2.ZRY

Mapcode Global: WHFJD.P8J6

Plus Code: 9C4XW33C+Q5

Entry Name: Langar Hall Including East West Range Adjoining and to North East

Listing Date: 12 February 1952

Last Amended: 23 February 1952

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1236012

English Heritage Legacy ID: 426850

ID on this website: 101236012

Location: Langar, Rushcliffe, Nottinghamshire, NG13

County: Nottinghamshire

District: Rushcliffe

Civil Parish: Langar cum Barnstone

Traditional County: Nottinghamshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Nottinghamshire

Church of England Parish: Langar cum Barnstone

Church of England Diocese: Southwell and Nottingham

Tagged with: House

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Description


LANGAR CUM BARNSTONE CHURCH LANE
SK73SW (west end)
5/106
12.2.52 Langar Hall including
east-west range
adjoining and to
north-east
GV II
Large house with attached service range. C18 and early C19 incorporating
earlier fabric. The service range c.1828. The house: stuccoed with hipped
slate roof and oversailing eaves. Rendered ridge stacks and paired end
stacks rising from a small projection to the left elevation. Two storeys.
Symmetrical 3-bay facade with slight centre break and corner pilaster
strips. Ashlar plinth. Central, round-arched doorway set in deep reveals
with alternately blocked rusticated surround. 6-panel part-glazed door with
fanlight. To each side is a tall sash window with glazing bars and raised
sill. Shorter similar windows to 1st floor. Two-bay right return with
similar windows that to ground floor right having been converted to a French
window with a small cornice on shaped brackets. Left return has projecting
chimney breast (possibly earlier) with 2 small windows at ground-floor
level. Altered porch to left. The service range: brick with slate roof,
hipped to right and gabled with coping to left. 3 brick stacks. Two
storeys. Seven bays in all. The earlier, right part is of 4 symmetrical
bays with glazing bar sashes to ground floor and shorter 6-pane sashes to 1st
floor, all with shallow segmental head. The left part is of 3 bays with a
part blocked elliptical-headed cart entrance, and, to 1st floor, 3 small
casement windows. Interior: the house has a stone stair with ornamental
cast-iron balustrade. In the rear (south) wall of the service range is a
massive ashlar, elliptical-arched recess and a smaller round-arched recess,
possibly a fireplace and an oven and probably a survival of an earlier
building.
N Pevsner. The Buildings of England, 1979.


Listing NGR: SK7209034653

External Links

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