Church Hall including Tool Shed to S is a Grade II listed building in the Conwy local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 12 November 1997. Church hall.

Church Hall including Tool Shed to S

WRENN ID
ruined-flagstone-magpie
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Conwy
Country
Wales
Date first listed
12 November 1997
Type
Church hall
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

This is a large Arts and Crafts style church hall, built in 1910, with a projecting wing to the south, forming an L-shaped layout. The building is constructed of squared, uncoursed local limestone blocks, with dressed limestone detailing and slate roofs. It features deep, slightly-feathered eaves. Tudor-arched openings contain recessed, small-pane sash windows with projecting, splayed sills. The main entrance is a gabled porch to the west, featuring a Tudor-arched entrance with recessed glazed double doors (with modern boarding to the lower half) and a 5-pane triangular overlight. To the left of the porch is a cambered-headed double 6-pane sash window, and to the right, two similar windows, with a tripartite cambered window beyond. An inset stone plaque reads: 'This stone was laid by the Rt. Hon. The Countess of Dundonald XX August MDCCCCX'. A tall, three-stage, square bell tower projects from the northeast corner, with a gently-battered base, rounded corners, an ungabled helm roof topped with a lead ball finial and deep eaves. Narrow Tudor-arched windows are present on the ground floor north side and on the first floor north and west, with louvred bell openings under the eaves on all faces. Large, contemporary clock faces are positioned below these on the north and west sides. The wide north gable has a coped parapet and three large Tudor-arched windows arranged in a triangular pattern, with paired smaller windows to the left, all with small-pane sashes. The long east side has five 2-part 12-pane windows under cambered heads, and the south gable features a three-window arrangement similar to the north gable.

The projecting gabled wing to the west has a plain central chimney with a moulded capping and projecting verges to the upper gable, forming a canopy bell-cote (the bell is now missing). The main floor has a pair of tall arched sash windows to the gable. A basement is located beneath, with two segmentally-arched rectangular windows with 6 panes. A recessed 9-pane sash window is found on the north return wall, alongside a further cambered basement window below. External stepped access leads to the main floor on the south side, with a rubble parapet and boarded door. Small 6- and 4-pane windows are under the eaves, along with a part-glazed boarded door to the left of the stair, with a segmentally-headed window beyond.

Immediately to the south of the hall stands an associated tool shed. This is a small, square gabled structure of rubble, with a slated roof, slightly feathered at the oversailing eaves, tiled ridges, and exposed rafter ends. A boarded door is centrally located with a toothed top for ventilation. The interior of the hall was not inspected during the survey.

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