The other windows in the block are round-arched sashes in architraves, and above them is a modillion cornice and gable pediments, and a parapet with moulded coping.
[2][4] Inside, the ground floor of the central block is a hall with 16th-century oak panelling and plasterwork, including an ornate ceiling with small pendants.
The second floor has fragments of plaster wall friezes and small areas of oak panelling, both similar to those found in the hall.
[2] In 1975 the Department of the Environment had given permission for much of the Hall to be demolished, leaving the west wing and only the end bay of the central block standing [5].
The Developer, Yuill (York) Limited, saved the Hall from partial destruction by converting it into ten self-contained houses and apartments in the 1980s.