Driving through idyllic country lanes surrounded by farmland with sheep and new born lambs was a beautiful experience and our first introduction to the lovely, imposing old building, now the Longworth Hall Hotel. On closer inspection, the building is not in the best condition. The exterior requires a lot of maintenance. Everything is just tired, broken and quite shabby. We soon realised that this also applied to the interior where everything is very "worn". The Hotel does try to carry the "country house" feel with a lot of the original decorative features & furnishings but fails due to lack of maintenance and care. My teenage granddaughter and I shared a large twin room with a very large window overlooking fields and a few grotty outbuildings. There was a generous wardrobe, dressing table, TV, bedside tables (with lamps), mirror, two chairs, kettle, coffee machine and ample tea, coffee, milk, sugar etc. BUT NO HAIRDRYER. The room needed painting, cracks required filling, furniture did not match and one curtain was hanging off. In the night the window rattled a lot, but in fairness it was a stormy night. The beds were very comfortable, the bedding was clean and the room was clean. The ensuite covered the basics. The bath had a shower hose (it definitely wasn't a shower) above it but the "shower screen" was propped up on the floor against a padlocked cupboard next to the bath... Hand was & body wash were provided but NO shampoo or conditioner. Breakfast was good. A small but adequate selection of yogurts, cereals, fruit, juice and a toaster with bread provided. The cooked breakfast was lovely, well made, albeit quite small. One: rasher of bacon, sausage, egg, hash brown, mushroom. Plus beans, fresh tomatoes. Despite all the above negatives, I would stay here again because it was cheap (£78 for the night for the two of us) and it was clean and comfortable.