Stable-courtyard ranges including staff houses at Llangoed Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Powys local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 17 September 1986. Stable-courtyard ranges, staff lodging house.
Stable-courtyard ranges including staff houses at Llangoed Hall
- WRENN ID
- peeling-turret-sage
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Powys
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 17 September 1986
- Type
- Stable-courtyard ranges, staff lodging house
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
The stable-courtyard ranges, including staff houses at Llangoed Hall, form a cohesive group of buildings that create a stable yard, enclosed by walls and hedges. The yard features a formal central opening on the south side and a service access on the west. The main structure consists of carriage houses on the north side, which return with stables on the east. At the western end of the north range is a three-storey staff lodging house.
The Lodging House, which was built as staff accommodation and continues to serve this purpose, is constructed of rubble sandstone with small quoins. It has three storeys and measures three bays wide by one bay deep, with an additional bay to the north creating an L-shaped plan. The southeast corner features a tower and a hipped part-octagonal entrance. The entrance has a partially glazed door, and there are three-light timber windows with applied leads set close to the wall surface. The walls rise to a parapet, and the pitched roof has small gables on two sides. The square tower is topped with a two-stage sprocketed tiled roof in a mansard style, finished with a wind vane shaped like a salmon. Tall diagonal linked brick stacks are present.
The carriage house range consists of five bays and is made of colourwashed brick with a red tiled roof. It features boarded doors, with the central entrance defined by squat pilasters that support a pediment with a tympanum featuring a segmental arch. The roof is hipped over the pediment and rises to a central bell and clock tower, which has a four-way pediment supported by Tuscan columns and is capped with a copper-clad base for a tall vase terminal. The clock and bell are currently absent. At the eastern end, a flat canopy on stone piers connects this range to the eastern stables, which are also constructed of rubble and have a hipped tiled roof.
The courtyard is enclosed by stone walls and gate piers that are similar in style to those found in the Laundry Yard.
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- Flood risk assessment
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