Ewing Wing amounts to 6265 sq feet (582.25 sq metres) with rooms of grand proportions with spectacular views of the grounds and parkland beyond which is superb.
The drawing room and dining room, sitting facing west both have beautiful marble surrounds.
There is also a stunning orangery which opens to the kitchen cum family room.
The reception rooms which includes a drawing room and dining room are elegant and decorated in rich golds and greens.
The stunning orangery and vast kitchen are in lighter colours. Most of the rooms are left untouched structurally apart from the kitchen which were two dank rooms. So the wall was knocked down to create a huge kitchen measuring 41' 9" long. With hand built cream painted units and granite work surfaces. And a matching four oven Aga with a sitting room at the other end.
The former housekeeper's dresser has been moved elsewhere in Rangemore Hall to the kitchen and provides cupboards and shelving for display and storage.
Other downstairs rooms includes a snug, utility and guest cloakroom.
There are four bedrooms on the first floor with three bathroom/shower rooms.
The master has got an en suite shower room with double basins and a bidet and a dressing room. There is a family bathroom with a roll top bath sitting between bedrooms two and three and a shower room next to bedroom four.
It has got private parking and garden.
The views out across the grounds, which covers 16 acres and a feature a very large lake. The gardens are said to have been laid out by Sir Joseph Paxton and later by Edward Milner both of whom worked at Chatsworth. The Ewing Wing has a guide price of £925.000 and is leasehold. For details, ring 0121 3627878 and is being sold by Frank Knight.
Rangemore Hall was rebuilt by Michael Thomas Bass in the late 1850s. Rangemore Hall is a most impressive country house standing in stunning parkland and surrounded by undulating Staffordshire farmland. The mansion has an early 19th core and there is a plaque carrying the date 1822. His son the first Lord Burton inherited the property and in 1898 started major works by remodelling and extending the house in the Italian Style of architecture.
When the work was completed in 1902. King Edward VII made his first public visit and stayed at the house. The major part of the house is named The King Edward VII Wing.
In 1909 Nellie, Baroness Bass inherited Rangemore Hall and for 70 years she split her time between Rangemore and two of her Scottish homes. When it became too big for her, it was sold to Staffordshire County Council in 1944. Rangemore Hall was occupied by the American GIs until 1945. In 1954 it was opened as the "Needwood School for the Hard of Hearing", and closed in 1985. It is now divided into eight beautiful wings and apartments.