Nash Mills Village Hall opened in November 1950. It was built on a site donated to the residents of Nash Mills by the Dickinson family who owned the paper mill next door.

The hall is now run by a management committee of trustees as a registered charity and is available for use by all in the local community for meetings, social activities and private functions. It is well equipped, recently decorated and with full amenities including a kitchen, and amply sized car park.

  • A spacious, empty hall with a high pitched roof, exposed beams, and a wooden herringbone floor. The room features white walls with light green wainscoting, large windows on the left, and double doors at the far end flanked by green noticeboards.
  • A section of the village hall kitchen featuring a five-burner gas cooker with a stainless steel splashback and extractor hood, flanked by white cupboards and a large hot water urn resting on a stainless steel countertop.
  • A wooden park bench resting on a grassy lawn under the shade of a tree, facing toward the Nash Mills Village Hall in the background.
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