Tyringham Hall
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Tyringham Hall (/ˈtiːrɪŋəm/) is a Grade I listed stately home, originally designed by Sir John Soane in 1792. It is located in Tyringham near Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire, England. The estate is highlighted in The Beekeeper (2024 film).
The house was built on the site of the original manor house by William Praed, with plans by Sir John Soane.[1]
The house was bought by American banker Fredric Konig in 1907, who commissioned Ernst von Ihne to remodel the house including the addition of a copper dome to the portico. Later, in 1911, Charles G. F. Rees was brought in to lay out the oval forecourt and Rose Garden.[2] Later additions by Edwin Lutyens in 1924 include the Bathing Pavilion, Temple of Music and Pergola. Tyringham Hall stands in Lutyens’ formally laid-out gardens, with a tree-lined drive leading past the deer park to a gravel sweep in front of the house. The façade features stone columns with sphinxes on either side of the entrance porch leading to the reception rooms. The Temple of Music had a Welte-Philharmonic Organ.[3]