Pugin Hall

[1] The house is a Grade I listed building,[1] the top category, 'of highest significance'.

[2] Pugin Hall was built in 1846–1847 as a replacement for the earlier rectory at Rampisham, Parsonage House, which was considered to be too dilapidated to be suitable for repair.

Pugin Hall was a major commission by one of the most distinguished architects of the Victorian era, A.W.N.

It is a characteristic and highly influential example of one of Pugin's smaller, professional middle-class houses and is considered to be the most complete example of domestic architecture designed by him.

The survival of such an unaltered house by Pugin is very rare and there is clearly no doubt at all about its exceptional importance.

Pugin Hall