Garth (Including attached byre and farmyard wall) is a Grade II listed building in the Flintshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 16 October 1995. Pottery.

Garth (Including attached byre and farmyard wall)

WRENN ID
first-arch-hyssop
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Flintshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
16 October 1995
Type
Pottery
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

Garth is a 2-storey domestic building that includes an attached byre and a farmyard wall. The structure is built of rubble, which is whitewashed on the domestic range, and features a slate roof. There is a brick chimney and a stone chimney, which has been repaired with brick, located at the gable end. The domestic range consists of a single unit with a vertical masonry joint visible next to the left-hand door. To the right, there is an added or rebuilt range, and a separate, apparently unheated cottage attached to this range. A barn is also attached to the right of the cottage.

The domestic range has plank doors and three 12-pane horizontally-sliding sash windows on the first floor, along with a tall 16-pane horizontally-sliding sash window at the extreme right. There are two later windows to the left. The barn, which shares the same roofline, features ventilation slits and two doors, both under cambered arches, with a later lower extension to the right. Attached at right angles to the left is a two-storey range that has a stone chimney in the gable end, with masonry breaks suggesting that an additional storey was added. The inner face of this range has one 8-pane horizontally sliding sash window on each floor.

The right-hand return elevation includes a single-storey rubble outshut with altered windows and roughcast on the gable. Inside, the left range has a heavy chamfered bridging beam, a fireplace with a cambered bressummer, plank and latch doors, and a slate floor in the single-storey outshut. There is a 19th-century stair, and the upper rooms connect to one another. A stud partition at ground floor level separates the main building from the added cottage. The roof structure could not be inspected during the 1995 survey. The barn lacks partitions, and its roof was likely remodelled in the 19th century, reusing timbers that date back to the 17th or 18th century.

A rubble garden wall surrounds the domestic part and extends to form the entrance to the farmyard, which features simple monolithic gateposts.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Vaulted Structure immediately to rear of Garth Farmhouse Grade II 15 m
  2. Jubilee Monument Grade II 1.9 km
  3. The Old Vicarage Grade II 1.9 km
  4. Barn at Plas-yn-Llan Grade II 1.9 km
  5. Hearse House at Church of St Mary (Including Churchyard Walls and Lych Gate Grade II 2.0 km
  6. Lime Kiln at Tre-Lan Grade II 2.1 km
  7. Barn at Glyn Arthur Grade II 2.5 km
  8. Glyn Arthur Grade II 2.5 km
  9. Domestic outbuilding at Glyn Arthur Grade II 2.5 km
  10. Ffynnon Gynhafal Grade II 2.5 km