Denston Hall
Once the site of a moated Tudor mansion, Denston Hall is a late-seventeenth/early eighteenth century house set in a park dating back to at least the eighteenth century. One wing of the Tudor mansion and arm of the moat survive at the rear of the Hall. Probably a replanting of an earlier avenue, trees line the entrance drive today. South of the Hall is a lozenge-shaped walled garden with three surrounding canals thought to be early-eighteenth century. On the site there is a sixteenth century barn and attached dovecote and also decorative park gates. The park has changed little since the nineteenth century, although additional planting and replanting of shelterbelts and woods has taken place and a large lake was created east of the Hall in the early-twenty-first century. The walled garden and surrounding pleasure gardens continue to be well cared for and in the early-twenty-first century parts were partly-redesigned by Mark Rumary and later Xa Tollemache.
Not open to the public

