A "lobby" is always a large room around or near the entrance to a building. Usually it is a public building. Often, a hotel has a lobby, and a theater has a lobby. But our house doesn't have a "lobby." And a lobby is not a "long, narrow space."
Confusingly, "hall" has two different definitions. A "hall" can be long, narrow passageway or corridor. Schools have halls. Hospitals have halls. "Go down that hall, and the cafeteria is near the end, on the right.
But a "hall" can just be any big room--or even an entire building, particularly at a university, or a big British estate. "At the University of Wisconsin, Bascom Hall is at the top of the hill, with a statue of Lincoln in front." "In the novel, 'The Wind in the Willows,' Mr. Toad lives in Toad Hall."
So it is correct to say that a lobby is a kind of hall, but not all halls are lobbies.