Situated on street line, adjoining Manchester House, Bridge Street. Early C19 house altered in later C19, stucco on rubble stone, 3-storey, double fronted with imitation slate roof and stone end stacks.
Situated immediately east of Napier Street. Circa 1875-80 terrace of 5 houses, built and probably designed by William Woodward, builder and proprietor of the Cardigan brickworks. Red brick with extensive dressings in moulded or pressed brick, centre house is gabled and advanced, one-window with door to left, the rest 2-window and all 2 storeys. Upper windows are 4-pane sashes with notched brick segmental heads, slate sills and painted wood boards with incised crosses over window heads. Ground floors each have a canted bay with hipped metal clad roofs, but centre house has 2-storey bay in centre and door to left. Doors are all 2-panel, with notched brick segmental pointed arches and carved heads to varied designs as keystones. Centre house has bargeboarded gable and small pointed attic light. Red brick ridge stacks.
Situated opposite Bethania Chapel in terraced row. Mid C19 house in terrace row, unpainted stucco with slate roof and stone end stacks. Two storeys, double-fronted with ogee eaves gutter on paired brackets. Hornless 12-pane sash windows with painted slate sills. Applied slate plinth. Centre 6-panel door with overlight in Roman Doric doorcase, 2 half columns with entablature blocks over and pediment. In front low iron railings with top rail and spearhead dog-bars.
Situated at west end of terraced row, on street line. Early to mid C19 row of 3 houses, stuccoed with slate roofs and stone or brick stacks. Three storeys, No 20 2-window, the other 2 one-window.
Situated in terraced row towards lower end of street. Early to mid C19 pair of houses, roughcast and stucco with slate roof and brick end stacks, that to right rebuilt on stone base.
Situated on street line, penultimate building to east end of street. Early C19 pair of houses in rubble stone banded in blue lias with imitation slate roof and end brick stacks.
Situated in continuous terraced row, 2 buildings up from Post Office. Early C19 house, blue lias stone with slate roof and brick end stacks. Three-storey, 3-window range with paired brackets to eaves, matching No 29 adjoining. Three 9-pane hornless sashes to second floor, cambered brick heads; Three 12-pane hornless sashes to first floor with stucco that formerly covered facade left around each window; and ground floor mid C20 shop front with door to left. Shopfront projects and is full-width.
Situated on street line immediately north of Black Lion Hotel. Early C19, blue lias rubble stone with slate roof, one truncated brick ridge stack to right and one red brick north end stack. Three-storey. 3-window. 1 plus 2, with first floor 12-pane sashes, hornless, with slate sills and brick heads and similar 6-pane windows above. Flat eaves with paired brackets. Ground floor retains original carriage arch into Black Lion Yard, right, blue lias voussoirs to broad depressed arch, cut into brickwork of Black Lion. The rest has mid C20 black tiled shopfronts, 3 narrow frontages. Two rear wings.
Situated on street line, opposite the Shire Hall. Late C18 or early C19 house, altered in later C19 as shop, stucco with slate roof and brick end stacks. Three storeys and attic, 3-window range but probably originally 5-window to match upper floor.
Situated on street line, just west of Carrier's Lane. Early C19 house, unpainted stucco with slate roof and C20 brick end stacks. Double-fronted, 2-storey range with 2 12-pane sashes above and 2 16-pane sashes below, hornless with slate sills and stucco voussoirs. Centre 6-panel door with narrow lozenge pattern overlight, moulded timber doorcase, reeded with shallow timber hood on brackets.
Situated on street line in terraced row. Early to mid C19, 2 pairs of large 3-storey, 2-window houses built as single terrace, brown sandstone banded in blue lias, with slate roof and matching south end stone stack. North end stack rebuilt in brick. Each pair has 4-window range of close spaced sashes with cambered painted voussoirs and painted slate sills, 6-pace square upper windows and 12-pane first floor windows. Ground floor originally had paired centre doors with lozenge patterned overlights, incised decoration to piers and paired cornices on scrolled brackets.
Situated on south east corner of Eben's Lane. Early to mid C19 house and shop, in blue lias ashlar with slate eaves roof and red brick end stacks. Three-storey, 3-window range of sashes with cambered heads, stone voussoirs and slate sills. Six-pane upper windows and 12-pane to first floor, but centre window each floor is blocked and first floor right has ca1900 square timber oriel. Ground floor has two C20 shopfronts.
Situated at north boundary of community area, some 2.25km towards Gwbert from Cardigan. Circa 1820-40 house in squared blue lias stone with slate roof, coped gables and stone end stacks. Formal 3-window front, 2-storeys with centre attic pediment.
Dyddiad adeiladu:
1820-40
CADW Ref:
10480 - Grade II
Dyddiad rhestru:
16/06/61 and 14/04/1992
Situated down track running west off Poppit Road, just on St Dogmael's north boundary. 1839-40 former Cardigan Union Workhouse, by William Owen of Haverfordwest, probably to plans by G Wilkinson of Oxford, architect to the Poor Law Commissioners. Built for £3,250 for poor of 25 parishes in Cardiganshire and Pembrokeshire. There were some 130 inmates in 1870s.
Situated in continuous row, facing up Morgan Street. Early C19 hotel, stucco fronted rubble stone, with slate deep-eaved roof and rebuilt red brick end stacks.
Situated on corner of St Mary's Street and Carrier's Lane. Early C18 house, possibly refronted in early C19. Painted blue lias ashlar with slate roof and brick west end stack. Two-storey 3-window range of sashes with cambered painted heads and painted slate sills. 12-pane sashes above, 16-pane below and central ledged door, diagonally braced behind, in heavy oak moulded door frame of C17 or early C18 type. Regency style painted timber doorcase with reeded piers, caps with oval plaques and brackets to shallow hood. Large rear wall stack with old brick shaft. West end wall has one 12-pane attic window.
Situated in centre of triangular public garden immediately north of War Memorial. 1897 bandstand, cast-iron and sheet-metal on yellow-brick and slate base. Small scale, octagonal with 3 steps up on east side. Eight thin cast iron columns carring ornate scrolled spandrel brackets, and with mid-height cast-iron hand-rail over sheet-metal panels. Overhanging sheet-metal tent roof with rolled-lead ridges and cast iron ornate finial.
Situated on west side of Mwldan River south east of farmhouse. Later C19 farm buildings in rubble stone with slate roofs, L-plan single storey, the principal feature being a steep-roofed cow-house cross-gabled to main range with long hipped roof ventilator, an unusual C19 farm-building type for West Wales. The rear wall of cow-house has windows with brick cambered heads and gable recess, possibly for missing plaque. Gable wall is flush with low ranges each side, that to north, of earlier build, has brick-headed window, door, window then ridge stack and similar window, door, window beyond, the doors blocked. Range to south of cow-house is L-plan, roof hipped at angle, rear wall door and window with cambered brick heads, matching cow-house. South return wall is obscured.
Bethania Baptist Chapel (inc. railings, gatepiers and gates)
95
Situated mid-way down street, set back in railed forecourt. 1846-7 Baptist Chapel by Daniel Evans (1786-1852) of Cardigan. Built for £2.000. Evans was paid £2. Iron railings by D Davies, The Bridge, Cardigan, plaster by Thos. Rees, Fishguard. Improvements are recorded in 1868, the vestry 1882, organ 1900 and alterations to the entrance 1908. Classical style with unpainted stucco north end facade and blue lias rubble 2-storey. 4-window sides. Rear schoolroom and vestry added 1882. Slate deep-eaved pedimental roof with paired timber brackets.
Situated on street line opposite Eben's Lane. Later c18 inn, red brick, Flemish bond with stucco cornice and parapet and slate roof with brick end stacks. Three-storey, 5 window range of sashes with cambered brick heads, 6-pane to second floor, 12-pane to first floor, ground floor sashes replaced by shallow 12-pane C20 bow windows. Centre door with traceried overlight. Slate sills except to ground floor that has C20 brick sills. Door is in C20 rebuilt timber classical porch of 2 Roman Doric columns, the shafts untapered and without bases, pilaster responds, entablature with triglyphs over columns and flat cornice. Two lead downpipes with embossed lions on rainwater heads.
Prominently sited on quayside some 5Om west of Cardigan Bridge, on wharf known as Teifi Wharf or Mercantile Wharf. 1745 warehouse thoroughly remodelled in mid C19, now flats. Blue lias rubble stone with slate roof and stone end stacks. Four-storey 5-window range, C20 hardwood windows with cambered brick heads. Windows are 2-light to lower floors. 3-light to upper floors and centre windows replace loading doors. Top floor openings have been raised through eaves with small gables. East end wall has 3-storey stone lean-to, with ground floor door and plaque 'This granary was erected by David Parry Esq of Noyadd in Cardiganshire March ye 26 1745'; outside steps to left to first floor entry and steps continued within to second floor. Second floor window to right. Main range has east end third floor window.
Situated at eastern end of terraced row, adjoining Police Station. Circa 1870 house and office in squared stone with some banding in red brick and blue lias. Stone end stacks, truncated to left, that to right exceptionally broad, stepped with 10 short shafts, vertical incisions between shafts. Slate roof.
Situated in prominent but isolated setting on east bank of Teifi estuary, some 1.5km north north west of Cardigan, reached by narrow lane from Greenfield Row. Early C19 small country house, carefully restored 1985-9. Colour-washed roughcast or rubble stone walls, hipped slate roofs with deep bracketed eaves cornice and 3 stone end stacks.
Situated at southern end of street, on street-line. 1870-1 Independent Chapel, by Reverend T Thomas of Llandore (Thomas Glandwr), with house and vestry behind added 1885 by D Davies, Penrhiwllan. Chapel has rock-faced blue lias pedimental front with stucco dressings and arch-headed windows. Long paired windows each side, triplet to centre, all with pilaster jambs, moulded heads and keystones. Centre window of triplet is wider. Sill band under side windows interrupted by stucco doorcase, arched with arched hood between panelled pedestals carried on console brackets. Pedestals have concave square finials. Paired arch-headed doors and crescent overlight. Banded slate roof, 2-storey coursed rubble side walls, 4 windows, the upper ones arched. Forecourt enclosed by cast-iron railings, of intersecting oval pattern. Adjoining 2-storey, 3-window house, stuccoed with cambered headed openings and centre bargeboard gable. Slate roof, brick end stacks. Vestry and Sunday School behind.
Situated in terraced row, between Angel Hotel and corner house to Carrier's Lane. Long range of colour-washed stone 2-storey outbuildings behind, taller one-window range of 12-pane sashes with south end stack, then 2-window range of 12-pane sashes with stone end stack. Single storey outbuilding beyond. Early C19 house, now newspaper office, with roughcast front, imitation slate roof and red brick west end stack.
Road bridge over Teifi between Castle Street, Bridgend, and Bridge Street.Probably early C18 road bridge, widened 1872-3. Blue lias rubble stone 5-arch bridge with recessed cut-stone voussoirs to arches, cutwaters on both sides, those on west obscured in 1872-3 widening. On east side cutwaters are carried up full height to form pedestrian refuges, except for one to south of centre which is capped short with plaque above 'This arch was built in the year 1726 W Jones', but plaque may be reset as cutwater is shown full height in mid C18 prints. A small flood arch is at south end.
Situated on promontory overlooking Cardigan Bridge. C13 castle remains, probably mostly dating from a rebuilding of ca1244-54 under Robert Waleran, though the castle was in existence in 1136, was rebuilt in stone under the Lord Rhys in 1171 and repaired ca1204 and in 1220s.
Situated between rear of No 42 Saint Mary's Street and service drive to Castle Green House. Early C20 boundary wall in rubble stone with back-sloping crenellation, some 3m to 4m high, running from rear of No 42 Saint Mary's Street along Carrier's Lane and curving round into The Strand to terminate at service drive entry.
Situated at end of short lane off Bridge Street, formerly called Green Street. Circa 1828 formal entrance gates, of 4 big panelled blue lias piers, corniced, with stepped caps and cast-iron urns, the piers set at corners of square and linked each side by semi-circular dwarf wall with spearhead railings. Outer gatepiers have wrought iron paired gates, possibly moved, as they are hung on added stuccoed inner piers.
Situated within walls of Cardigan Castle. 1827 house by David Evans for Arthur Jones, High Sheriff, possibly including parts of a house said to have been under construction for J Bowen ca1808-10 (Meyrick) and incorporating to rear a round C13 tower of Cardigan Castle. Stucco fronted villa with hipped deep eaved slate roof and stone rear stacks, the rest of rubble stone, banded in blue lias slate on prominent east elevations, hipped slate roofs and stone stacks.
Situated within grounds of Castle Green House between rear of 43 St Mary's Street and entrance to stable court from The Strand. C19 retaining wall with raking castellations along east side of steep rear access drive.
Situated at south end of Cardigan Bridge. Marked on 1834 map. Daniel Evans, architect of Bethania Chapel, owned the inn and died here 1852. He may have designed it. Early C19 inn, blue lias squared stone with slate roof and brick side wall stacks. Gable facade to street of two storeys and attic, 3-window range.
Situated in terraced row against hillside, some 1km south of Cardigan Bridge. Early C19 house in whitewashed rubble stone with slate roof and whitewashed stone end stacks, larger to south end. Double-fronted 2-storey house with small 9-pane casements above, close to eaves, with slate sills and larger 4-pane sashes below, with recessed cambered stone voussoirs and slate sills. Similar head to centre 4-panel door. Lean-to against left wall.
Dyddiad adeiladu:
Early C19
CADW Ref:
22/C/105 (2) - Grade II
Dyddiad rhestru:
10/04/07
Situated to rear of No 40 Saint Mary's Street. 1837 former English Congregational Chapel, sold ca 1879 and used until 1991 as printing house of Cardigan and Tivyside Advertiser. The first Independent congregation in Cardigan was established in a loft behind No 39 St Mary's Street in 1799. In 1836, Thomas Lloyd came to Cardigan to set up the first foundry in the Mwldan bringing English-speaking workmen from Pembrokeshire. He leased Nos 39 and 40 Saint Mary's Street and built the Chapel 1837, the site being empty on 1834 map. Building was sold 1880 after the new Hope Chapel, Pendre, was built and briefly used as a Temperance Hall, before becoming part of the newspaper premises.
Situated at east end of Church Street, giving access to south west corner of churchyard. Early C19 tall gatepiers in blue lias ashlar, corniced with stepped caps and cast-iron urns. Piers are panelled. Iron gates with top rails ramped down, quatrefoil middle rail and dog-bars.
Situated on disused section of A487 by Glanpwllafon Bridge, some 2km south of Cardigan Bridge. Earlier C19 farmhouse in blue lias square stone with grouted slate roof and stone stacks to main range, brick south end stack.
Situated set back from road adjoining Stanley House. 1898 pair of villas built in the shell of the central block of the former Cardigan Gaol of 1793-7 by John Nash. In 1881 the gaol was converted to a police station by J Szlumper. The old gaol had a projecting pedimented frontispiece which seems to have been cut back to the main block, of which the hipped slate roof survives and a new double-gabled front put on for 2 villas, named Highbury and Brooklands. Three-storey and attic, with bargeboard gables, late C20 conservatory to ground floors and altered big first floor oriels with flower balconies under large second floor windows, also with late C20 glazing. Gothic attic lights.
Situated on north east corner of Eben's Lane. Built in 1914 for the Midland Bank. Portland stone with green slate recessed mansard roof and tall stone-corniced red brick north and east end stacks. One storey and attic, in a French C18 style.
Situated in timber yard, by River Teifi, overlooking Nant Degwel. Earlier C19 warehouse in banded rubble stone with slate roof, coped gables and stone end stacks. Four-storey 5-window front, centre loading doors, the uppermost door breaking eaves under hipped projecting hoist roof. Cast-iron hoist wheel. Ground floor is at semi-basement level now, with openings blocked. Cut stone voussoirs to first 3 floors, timber lintels to top floor windows. Slate sills.
Situated adjoining Post Office on north side. Circa 1870-80 small commercial premises, 2 storeys and attic, 2-window range, in red brick with slate roofs and brick end stacks. Two steep front gables with painted timber bargeboards and triangular headed sash-windows with nogged brick heads, 2 first floor 4-pane sashes with nogged cambered heads and moulded brick cornice under gables.
Situated on East bank of River Teifi, by high water mark, some 5Om SW of Old Castle Farmhouse. Early to mid C19 limekiln in coursed, tooled blue lias stone. Large scale, built into bank with three-sided, near-square plan, the E and W faces pierced by tall kiln-eyes, to nearly full height; the kiln-eyes are triangular above straight lower jambs and recede within to a small ground-level openings into main crucible. Main crucible is circular, tapering outwards from base to top and top platform is grassed with low parapet walls surviving on W and S sides.
Dyddiad adeiladu:
Early to mid C19
CADW Ref:
10549 - Grade II
Dyddiad rhestru:
14/04/1992
Situated on street line towards north end of High Street. 1888-9 bank, built for Brecon Old Bank by George Morgan and Son of Carmarthen. Red brick and Bath stone large 3-storey, 2-window range with slate roof and no stacks. Ground floor is ashlar-fronted with corniced fascia right across, between paired brackets; 7-bay range of doors and windows each with moulded depressed-arched head and 2-light mullioned overlight, the lights moulded with curved upper angles and stained glass. Modern doors and windows reversing the original arrangement. Centre door has plain ashlar tympanum inscribed 'Established 1782 Bank'.
No funding given. Situated down 60Om drive running east of B4546 from junction some 150m south of Webley Hotel. Early C18 farmhouse, possibly earlier origins, altered. Roughcast rubble stone with small slate roof, L-plan with 3 stone end stacks. One and a half storeys. Double-fronted with 12-pane sash in stucco surround each side of centre door in 1990 gabled porch. Six-panel door with overlight. Two gabled eaves dormers, not aligned, with C20 plate glass and slate sills. Raised stucco plinth and angle strips. West end wall has similar 12-pane ground floor sash and small upper window. Rear range has door in angle and C20 4-pane window to left. C20 porch. Upper floor has eaves breaking gabled small 12-pane sash to right and very small casement pair to left, under eaves.
Dyddiad adeiladu:
Early C18
CADW Ref:
22?C/104(2) - Grade II
Mount Zion Baptist Chapel (inc. forecourt railings and gatepiers)
68
Situated set back in railed enclosure. 1878-80 English Baptist chapel by George Morgan of Carmarthen. Red brick with moulded and pressed brick decorative details and some Bath stone dressings, since painted. Banded slate roofs. Four-window chapel with end facade in simplified Romanesque style, the facade made tripartite with narrow projecting centrepiece and flanks gabled to sides. Coped gables and iron finials. Crested ridge tiles. Centrepiece has big arched window with stilted arched head over paired doors in projecting gabled Bath stone doorcase. Bands of moulded or pressed bricks below sill and at impost level of main window. Pierced roundel in coped gable. Doorcase has 3 piers with shouldered caps, the centre pier cut back for attached column shaft, carved vine-leaf lunette in tympanum with arch voussoirs decorated with fleur-de-lys. Window over is painted ashlar with attached shaft between two arched lights, carved roundel in arch head with fleur-de-lys voussoirs. Ashlar plinth and band of black brick above continued around chapel.
C18 house, stucco fronted and altered possibly in conversion for National Provincial Bank ca1890, slate roof and modern brick end stacks. Two and a half storeys, 5-window range, 3 bays and 2 bays. Overhanging eaves with paired brackets, broken for 3 hornless 12-pane sashes, half-dormers with flat roofs. First floor has 5 ca1890 4-pane sashes in slim raised surrounds, grouped 3 to left and 2 to right and not aligned with windows above. Ground floor 5 bays, 3 windows, main door to bank and door to upper floors framed in row of pilasters with swollen capitals and entablature. In front of main door, in wider bay, entablature is broken forward and carried on 2 matching square piers. Plate glass sashes to windows, modern main door and overlight and 4-panel door with overlight in final bay.
Situated at end of terraced row, opposite Chancery Lane. Early C19 former Custom House (now shops) in coursed blue lias stone with slate roof. Single storey facade of 3 bays originally all with tall recessed arched openings, both arches with cut stone voussoirs, but right bay has large later C19 shopfront replacing original opening.
Situated on corner of Shingrig and David Street. Early C19 chapel converted to school in later C19, rubble stone with slate roof. Single storey 2-room school with 2 low single storey wings projecting to west. East side has 2 early C19 12-pane sashes with cambered stone heads and slate sills. North and south end walls have late C19 tall schoolroom windows, grouped triplet with cambered painted heads and slate sills. On west side is central original window with pointed head, intersecting glazing bars, and painted stone voussoirs. Low wing to left has west end casement pair, wing to right has west end bell cote and triple casement in painted stucco surround. Two tall red brick stacks were removed 1991, from main building.
Dyddiad adeiladu:
Early C19
CADW Ref:
22/C/101(2) - Grade II
Situated to north of the Old School, against north wall, and at right angles to David Street. Early C19 small cottage in whitewashed rubble stone with grouted slate roof. Double-fronted low 2-storey cottage with end stacks, and outbuilding (possibly former cottage) to east, to similar height. Cottage has tall brick west stack, stone east stack on ridge, two first floor 9-pane casements and 2 12-pane sashes and centre door to ground floor, all with cambered painted brick heads. Ground floor window in west end wall.
Set back against north wall of Castle Green and opposite Nos 8 and 9. Early C19 former stable block, now offices, said to have been built for Castle Green House. Blue lias rubble, square plan with hipped slate roof. Two storeys, the main block set back and low single storey and attic north east wing coming forward to street line. Upper floor has windows to centre and right with cambered red brick heads, that to centre a 16-pane sash, to right a longer 16-pane fixed light. Slate sills. Ground floor has wing to left, centre 16-pane sash and glazed sidelight adjoining, both under an iron lintel, a later insert as a cambered red brick head remains above the sash only. Door to right with brick head, modern stable door and overlight.
Situated to west of farmhouse, opposite side of access drive. Early to mid C19 range of outbuildings. Z-plan, enclosing south and west sides of yard, since infilled with later buildings and a further range running west from south end, rubble stone, partly whitewashed with corrugated asbestos roofs. North east end building, gable-ended to drive is lofted cartshed with east end elliptical-arched entry, stone voussoirs and 6 tiers of paired dove holes above, slate shelves. South side has 3 windows under eaves, 2 windows and door below. North side has centre upper loading door and window each side. Outside stone steps up to loft door. Lower range runs east, with roof hipped at north west angle and returns south with modern additions on east front. Lower south end range with stone south end stack on coped gable. Door at left end, then big outside stone steps to eaves-breaking loft door, then ground floor window, door, window with cambered stone heads and square upper window with timber lintel. Attached to rear south east angle, low cow-shed range with one door with overlight and timber lintel to left, then 4 matching stable doors with cambered stone heads. Small square openings to left and right of range of 4 doors.
Dyddiad adeiladu:
Early to mid C19
CADW Ref:
10551 - Grade II
Dyddiad rhestru:
14/04/1992
Situated some 1.5km south west of Cardigan Bridge, between A487 and lane to St Dogmaels. Earlier C19 house, probably rebuilt for Thomas Davies, The Bridge, Cardigan, who bought it in 1820. Parc y Pratt is recorded from 1201, held by Norman Pratt family, passed to Cole family and then to Thomas family. David Thomas died 1601. In c18 owned by Morris family, then a Mr. Sumner, who sold it to Thomas Davies 1, merchant and the house was probably built before his death in 1832. Rubble stone, 2-storey 3-window range with slate roof and rendered stone end stacks. Long rear wing. Main front has 12-pane hornless sashes with cambered stone voussoirs and slate sills. Centre 6-panel door with narrow lozenge-pattern overlight, painted timber Regency style doorcase with plain piers, deep fascia and shelf hood on brackets. Basement door to left.
Situated in large churchyard, with principal approach from Pontycleifion. History: C12 origins, C15, C18 and C19 parish church in blue lias stone, ashlar for west tower, chancel and organ chamber, rubble for nave. Slate roofs, hipped to chancel east end. West tower, broad aisleless nave with south porch and embattled chancel with north organ chamber and low vestry. Nave is medieval but substantially rebuilt according to plaque in porch in 1702-3. Windows, much renewed in later restorations, are of flat-headed mullioned type with arch-headed lights typical of C17 and south door has post Reformation segmental-pointed head. Another plaque in porch of 1639 may refer to alterations or to a new porch. Present porch is early C20, Gothic, with carved heads of Archbishop Davidson and Bishop Owen. Tower fell in 1705, was rebuilt up to 40 ft in 1711 and completed in 1748, and is large with minimal Gothic detail, single bell-openings and low west door. Big diagonal stepped buttresses to front angles. North east stair tower. Chancel is of exceptional quality for West Wales, C15, Perp. style, with ashlar traceried 3-light windows, 3-bay, buttressed, embattled and pinnacled (most of pinnacles taken down) with north east corner stair. North side has High Victorian organ chamber of 1877, extensively dressed in red brick and low flat-roofed vestry probably of ca 1926. One original window is lost to organ chamber.
Situated prominently on crest of hill some 0.75km south east of St Dogmaels. Circa 1810, altered pebbledashed with slate pyramid roof and apex banded stone stack. Basement and 2 storeys. Flat eaves with paired brackets. Three-window north front with later C19 plate glass sashes, slate sills, and centre door reached by flight of slate steps, rebuilt in C20. C20 door and overlight but original doorcase in modified classical style, 2 unfluted Greek Doric half columns, triglyph frieze and big oversailing cornice. Basement lights each side. Two-window west wall with 1991 conservatory. South east lower 2-storey rear wing.
Situated on street line towards west end of street. 1886-7. Two pairs of houses in red brick with slate roofs and brick stacks, the pairs similar but not identical.
Situated off The Strand by rear entrance drive to Castle Green House. Circa 1828 range of outbuildings in rubble stone with slate roofs. L-plan, 2-storey with cut blue lias stone voussoirs to openings. West range is gable ended to street with 3-window range, first floor window, window and loading door, ground floor door, window and door. Derelict interior with collar truss roof. Slightly recessed bay to right with superimposed cambered-head openings, linking to north range, also 3-window, but roof is lean-to against cliff-face behind. Smaller windows above with slate sills, centre window part blocked, ground floor 3 doors, left door part blocked, and small square window to right.
Dyddiad adeiladu:
Circa 1828
CADW Ref:
10461 - Grade II
Dyddiad rhestru:
14/04/1992
Situated set back in narrow forecourt, opposite William Street. 1832 Calvinistic Methodist chapel, altered 1864 and refronted 1902, this front simplified in 1986 restoration. The body of the chapel of 1832 survives, originally a lateral front with 2 long centre windows, outer pedimented doors and arched windows over, but in 1902 was radically altered with big projecting central organ chamber, franking porches and new stucco cladding. In 1986 the roof line was simplified by removal of cornice each side and pediments above, the lowering of the pediment of centrepiece and removal of a steep French-style slate roof behind the pediment.
Situated in terraced row on street line. Early C19 house, one of a pair, rubble stone with imitation slate roof and south end brick stack. Two storeys, double fronted with paired brackets to deep flat eaves. 12-pane sashes with cambered brick heads and slate sills, except to ground floor left which has modern plate glass shopwindow. Centre 6-panel door with traceried narrow overlight in Regency-style reeded dooorcase with shelf hood on brackets. Panelling below hood.
Circa 1880 substantial house, stucco with hipped slate eaves roof to main part and apex brick corniced stack. Three storeys and attic, one-window main front and recessed wing to left. Said to have been built for Edgar Rees, grocer. Main front has rusticated ground floor, cornice above, then 3-bay upper floors with narrow blank panels each side of centre window bay. Cornice right across at first floor level and the 4 piers have paired brackets under eaves. First floor big canted oriel with cornic