Crud yr Awel is a Grade II listed building in the Gwynedd local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 26 September 2005. Terrace of houses, shop.

Crud yr Awel

WRENN ID
proud-pedestal-fog
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Gwynedd
Country
Wales
Date first listed
26 September 2005
Type
Terrace of houses, shop
Source
Cadw listing

Description

Crud yr Awel is a terrace of four 2-storey houses and a shop at 8-16 Church Street, Tremadog. The buildings have various rendered fronts, slate roofs, and four stone stacks (with no stack at the left end). The architectural details differ across the terrace, with most of the fronts dating to the later 19th century.

Nos 8-10 comprise a 2-window shop (formerly The Post Office) and house finished in scribed render. The shop has a modern replacement small-pane window with a recessed half-glazed door, simple Tuscan pilasters below a fascia and moulded cornice. Other openings feature hood moulds. The house at No 10 is entered at the left end by a recessed replacement panelled door and overlight. The upper storey contains replacement top-hung windows 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 to the left of centre and has a recessed central door of 2 round-headed panels under an overlight. Windows are 12-pane hornless sashes with slate sills. No 14 is a 2-window house with grey pebble-dashed front and openings offset to the left. The entrance on the left side has an added half-glazed porch containing 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. The front bears a plaque commemorating William Jones.

No 16 is a pebble-dashed 2-window house. The entrance on the left side has a modern open porch of steel posts supporting an entablature and cornice with dentil frieze. The replacement door has 2 circular panels and glazed round-headed upper panels under a plain overlight. On the right side is a late 19th century 2-storey canted bay window with 4-pane sashes, and the upper storey also has a 4-pane sash window above the doorway. The rubble-stone left gable end of No 16 has a replacement attic window to the right of centre.

To the rear, the houses have 2-storey wings except for a 1-storey wing to No 12, with added skylights and a roof dormer added to No 14.

Detailed Attributes

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