Hyssington Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Powys local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 1 October 1996. Church.
Hyssington Farm
- WRENN ID
- inner-baluster-indigo
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Powys
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 1 October 1996
- Type
- Church
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
Hyssington Farm is a Grade II listed building that consists of a main range and a cross-wing, with the main range extended by a single bay to the south. The building features an outshut and a gabled projection at the rear. The roof on the east side is covered with clay tiles, while the west side has a slate roof. The main range has an axial brick stack with star-shaped flues and is currently roughcast, although it is likely originally timber framed. It includes two casement windows located under the wall plate and a single small-paned casement in the lower storey. There is a 20th-century door beneath a projecting flat hood.
The cross-wing is timber framed with close studding and features a moulded girding beam, along with square panels above the tie beam. The tie beam is jettied, has a moulded soffit, and is supported by moulded brackets. The gable has replaced casements in earlier openings, and there are 20th-century doors with projecting flat hoods. The north wall of the cross-wing is roughcast, and there is a lean-to structure made of random rubble with a corrugated metal roof and a brick stack. The timber framing of the rear wall of the cross-wing has largely been renewed or rebuilt in brick painted black to imitate timber. There are replaced casement windows in the gable and inserted casements in both the upper and lower storeys. The outshut is roughcast and sits on a stone platform, with a recently inserted door.
The gabled wing at the rear is two storeys high, has a slate roof, and an end brick stack. On the south side, there is an iron-framed casement window under the wall plate and another iron-framed casement in the lower storey beneath a stone segmental head. The extension of the main range to the south also features an end brick stack. In the front, there is an iron-framed casement under the wall plate and double-glazed doors beneath a wedge lintel. The rear wall is roughcast.
The building has a lobby entry plan with back-to-back fireplaces, and the roof is said to incorporate windbraces. Other internal features are no longer visible.
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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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