Oakley Hall Deane, England

Listed Building Data

Oakley Hall has been designated a Grade II listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1092908
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
17 October 1984
Name
OAKLEY HALL
Location
OAKLEY HALL
Parish
Deane
District
Basingstoke and Deane
County
Hampshire
Grid Reference
SU 55910 49966
Easting
455910.0970
Northing
149965.8100

Description

1795, remodelled 1860. A square 3-storeyed mansion of the first date, with later minor additions but with an extensive range of ancilliary buildings on its west side of the second date. The entrance (north) front has 3.3.3 windows, the sides being semi-circular.

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

SU 54 NE OAKLEY AND DEANE 14/3 Oakley Hall GV II

1795, remodelled 1860. A square 3-storeyed mansion of the first date, with later minor additions but with an extensive range of ancilliary buildings on its west side of the second date. The entrance (north) front has 3.3.3 windows, the sides being semi-circular. Ripped tile roof, stucco balustrade above a bold modillion cornice. Walling in red brickwork, Flemish bond in the flat centrepiece header bond to the curved walls, rubbed flat arches with flush deep stone keystones, stone cill band to the second floor, thin stone cill band above a wider band to the first-floor (with sunk panels beneath the openings) stone cill band to the ground-floor, and brick plinth. Sashes in reveals (original on the first and ground-floor of the east side bow). The doorway is a porte-cochere (of 1860) in fine white stone, in the form of a Roman arcade with detached Ionic columns in front of pilasters, all being fully-moulded and with a balustraded parapet; the square made by the 3 arches is linked to the house by narrower arches, enclosing a flight of 4 steps towards double doors, within an architrave. The east elevation is a regular 7-bays of the same treatment, with a simple 1/2-glazed door below a fanlight, at the fifth-bay. The garden (south) front is also symmetrical, but the flat sides contain a window of standard width flanked by narrower lights; and a central simple angular brick porch (1860) of slight projection. The complex range of ancilliary buildings extend from the west side, and begin as 2-storeyed elevations of similar form, but with brick dentil eaves to the tile roofing. This block ends in a tall water-tower, with a pyramid roof, brick dentil eaves, bands, and coupled blind arcades in the upper part. Further west the buildings continue at a lower level, with gabled 1/2-dormer windows, to link with the north-east corner of the stable block.

Listing NGR: SU5758250862