16 Hoel y Llan (Church Street) is a Grade II listed building in the Gwynedd local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 30 March 1951. House, shop.
16 Hoel y Llan (Church Street)
- WRENN ID
- secret-arch-rye
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Gwynedd
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 30 March 1951
- Type
- House, shop
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
A terrace of four 2-storey houses and a shop in Tremadog, featuring various rendered fronts, slate roofs, and four stone stacks (with no stack at the left end). The houses display varied architectural details, mostly from the later 19th century.
Nos 8-10 comprise a 2-window shop, formerly the Post Office, and house with scribed render. The shop frontage is a modern replacement with a small-pane window, recessed half-glazed door, simple Tuscan pilasters below a fascia and moulded cornice, and hood moulds over other openings. The house at No 10 is entered at the left end by a recessed replacement panelled door with overlight. Upper-storey windows are replacement top-hung panes, offset to the left and aligned with the doorways.
No 12 is a double-fronted house with a cream-painted pebble-dashed front, smooth-rendered pilaster strips, upper-storey sill band, and architraves. The entrance is offset left of centre, with a recessed central door of two round-headed panels under an overlight. Windows are 12-pane hornless sashes with slate sills.
No 14 has a grey pebble-dashed front with a 2-window composition. Openings are offset to the left. An added half-glazed porch on the left side contains a replacement half-glazed door under a round-headed overlight with relief foliage in the spandrels. Windows are 2-pane sashes in original openings, horned in the lower storey and hornless in the upper storey. The front bears a commemorative plaque to William Jones.
No 16 is a pebble-dashed 2-window house. The left-side entrance has a modern open porch with steel posts supporting an entablature and cornice with dentil frieze. The replacement door has two circular panels and glazed round-headed upper panels under a plain overlight. The right side features a late 19th-century 2-storey canted bay window with 4-pane sashes, with a further 4-pane sash in the upper storey above the doorway. The rubble-stone left gable end has a replacement attic window right of centre.
To the rear, the houses have 2-storey wings except No 12, which has a 1-storey wing. Skylights and a roof dormer have been added to No 14.
Detailed Attributes
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