Eisingrug is a Grade II listed building in the Snowdonia National Park local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 30 December 2004. A Victorian Cottage.
Eisingrug
- WRENN ID
- tenth-outpost-yarrow
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Snowdonia National Park
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 30 December 2004
- Type
- Cottage
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
Eisingrug is a two-storey estate cottage built in 1889. It features a main three-window range that runs roughly west to east, with a storeyed wing at the rear that forms an L-shaped plan. There is also a single-storey cartshed wing at the west gable. The cottage is constructed from heavily mortared rubble masonry, incorporating large stones as quoins and lintels. It has a slate roof with overhanging eaves, while the rear wing has a roof covered with small old slates that are grouted. The gable stacks have dripstones and capping.
The principal elevation faces an enclosed garden to the south and displays a three-window range with irregularly spaced openings. The windows are 4-paned horned sashes with slate sills, and the first-floor windows are set in gabled dormers that break the eavesline. To the left (west) end of the range is a single window, while paired dormers are located to the right, with the entrance situated beneath the left-hand window. The door is a modern half-glazed door beneath a shallow pitched porch roof made of slate, with rendered walls. Above the doorway, there is a datestone that indicates the date of construction: 1889.
On the rear of the main range, there are small irregularly spaced openings, with the doorway located in a gabled rendered porch to the left (east). The windows here are a mix of 4-paned horned sashes and timber casements.
The rear wing consists of a two-window range with openings offset to the right. It has a doorway to the right (south) and a boarded opening to the left, with first-floor windows featuring 16-pane hornless sashes. At the rear, there is a boarded door to the right (north) and a single 4-paned light to the left.
The single-storey range at the west end of the main range has undergone extensive alterations in the 20th century. It has been rendered at the east end, features boarded openings to the west, and has a roof made of profiled metal sheeting. At the west end, there are stone pillars that may have belonged to a cartshed or a smithy, as recorded in the tithe apportionment.
The interior was not inspected during the survey.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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