Wysall
Information and a map of Wysall Conservation Area.
The 19 hectare Conservation Area includes nearly all the built-up area of the village and its population of 320 people. It contains 5 Listed Buildings, and was designated a Conservation Area in 1990.
Set in a beautiful churchyard, the Grade I Church of the Holy Trinity is part Norman and part 14th century. The lovely font - a round bowl on five shafts - dates from the 13th century. Beneath the small 600 year old spire, the belfry can be reached via a medieval ladder of a similar age.
Other notable buildings within this picturesque and compact village are the part Elizabethan timber framed Manor House which dates from the 16th and 17th century, and the red brick and pantile cottage on Widmerpool Road known as The Nook, the end gable wall of which is inscribed "1718" in blue bricks. Both these buildings are Grade II listed.
The boundary of the Conservation Area was first reviewed and extended in September 2010, the most recent review commenced in February 2024 and was formally extended and adopted in February 2025.
For further advice, contact Design and Conservation.
Documents to download
- Wysall Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Plan
- Wysall Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Plan (accessible html)
- Wysall Conservation Area Boundary Map
- Wysall Townscape Appraisal
Conservation Areas in Rushcliffe
- Aslockton
- Bingham
- Bradmore
- Bunny
- Car Colston
- Colston Bassett
- Costock
- Cropwell Bishop
- Cropwell Butler
- East Bridgford
- East Leake
- Edwalton
- Flintham
- Granby
- Hawksworth
- Hickling
- Keyworth
- Kneeton
- Langar
- Normanton on the Wolds
- Orston
- Ruddington
- Scarrington
- Sutton Bonington
- Thoroton
- Thrumpton
- Upper Broughton
- Upper Saxondale
- West Leake
- Whatton in the Vale
- Wiverton
- Wysall