Well House Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Flintshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 5 October 2005. House.

Well House Farm

WRENN ID
eastward-obsidian-rook
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Flintshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
5 October 2005
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

Well House Farm is a simple Tudor-Gothic style house dating from the 19th century. It is a symmetrical, three-window building with one-and-a-half storeys, made of brick with pecked sandstone dressings, topped by an old slate roof with brick end stacks. The stone dressings include quoins, a plinth, chamfered surrounds for the windows and doors, moulded kneelers, and raised copings.

The central stone doorcase features a boarded door with a two-pane overlight, divided by a mullion. The stone cross-windows have small sashes with horizontal glazing bars, positioned on either side of each mullion. The lower storey openings are topped with square hoodmoulds. The upper storey windows are set under gabled half-dormers, which also exhibit similar stone detailing, including kneelers and raised copings.

On the south gable end, there is a similar cross-window offset to the left on the upper storey. Below it, there are metal French doors, likely from the early 20th century, and two single lights to the right with sandstone lintels. The north gable end features two small lights towards the left and a lean-to on the right that contains two small lights. The rear of the house has a large metal-framed window to the left, probably from the early 20th century, while the upper storey has a gabled half-dormer with a cross-window similar to the front, and a two-light window to its right.

To the right, a two-storey rear wing adjoins the main range and appears to have been extended, with the ridge stack likely originally an end stack. This rear wing has been converted into two flats, with the front facing south. The windows in this section are asymmetrical, consisting of either two- or three-light small-pane wooden casements or early 20th-century metal windows, all under sandstone lintels. There are part-glazed double doors to the far right leading to one flat, while the second flat is accessed by steps to the west gable end. The rear also features a small two-window gabled wing, with an added flat-roofed porch at the angle with the main range, and a large lean-to that includes a flat-roofed dormer to the right.

The interior has not been seen as of the last inspection on August 7, 2005.

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