No 2 The Gardd including outbuilding to rear is a Grade II listed building in the Powys local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 5 April 1993. Church.
No 2 The Gardd including outbuilding to rear
- WRENN ID
- eastward-rampart-swift
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Powys
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 5 April 1993
- Type
- Church
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
No 2 The Gardd, including the outbuilding to the rear, is a two-storey building with an attic and a cellar beneath the right side. It features rendered rubble walls and a slate roof, with raised gable ends that have dressed stone coping and kneelers. The building has three brick stacks with oversailing courses, including two end stacks and a ridge stack located to the left of centre. There is a projecting early 19th-century wing at the rear left, which has exposed rubble walls, brick dentil eaves, a slate roof, and a brick side stack.
The front of the building has three windows, with six-pane sashes on both the ground and first floors. There are three slate-hung roof dormers that feature two-light modern casements. To the right of centre, there is a modern open-fronted porch, while a blocked doorway to the left has been infilled with a brick panel and window. The plain timber doorcase has a pediment. The rear wing contains three sashes and a wide, part-glazed plank door that is sheltered by a moulded timber and iron hood. On the gable end, there is a three-light casement window with an external shutter, and behind No 1, there is a one-and-a-half storey lean-to with a tall dormer projection, constructed of rubble stone with a slate roof and modern glazing and doors.
C19 plain rounded railings and gates separate the two properties. The outbuildings consist of a two-storey block made of stone rubble with a slate roof, featuring large double doors and a loft door, along with an adjoining single-storey block that has been converted into a garage.
No 1 was modernised in 1984, which obscured the original plan, replaced the stairs, and removed a beam with a 5-inch chamfer. In the cellar, there is a 17th-century chamfered beam with straight cut stops, boxed beams in the ground floor rooms, and exposed roughly squared beams on the first floor, along with chamfered purlins. The building has a massive internal chimney stack and period plank doors with large H-L hinges. No 2 features six-panel doors and 17th-century chamfered beams with run-out stops, as well as exposed joists.
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- No EPC on record for this property
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