The Bishop's Palace is a 17th-century building situated in the north-east corner of the Cathedral Close in Lichfield, Staffordshire in England.
The building was built in the Queen Anne style and comprises two storeys with a seven-window range, low-pitched hipped roof with dormer windows.
As built the palace comprised on the ground floor, a central hall and parlour with a drawing room on the east and a chapel on the west.
A bakehouse, brewhouse, and pigsty were built in the north-west corner of the grounds, the rest of which was laid out as gardens and a cherry orchard.
The building was effectively a shell, all the timber work of the hall and of the chambers at its north end was destroyed and only the stone vault remained.
After the war Bishop Hacket used stone from the building to renovate a house on the south side of the Close as his residence.
[1] The only fragment of the medieval palace which survives is the base of a column found in the early 20th century and set up in the garden.