A lodge in state of disrepair and ancient (3-3)
I believe the answer is:
age-old
'ancient' is the definition.
(I've seen this before)
'a lodge in state of disrepair' is the wordplay.
'a lodge' anagrams to 'AGE-OLD'.
Though, I'm not clear how the anagram is indicated.
'and' is the link.
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for age-old that I've seen before include "Lasting from times long ago" , "Dating from long ago" , "Extremely ancient" , "Hallowed by antiquity" , "Having been around for many years" .)