No 1 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. House.

No 1 The Gardd including outbuilding to rear

WRENN ID
endless-fireplace-sorrel
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Powys
Country
Wales
Date first listed
5 April 1993
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

Also on this page: sale history · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

No 1 The Gardd, which includes an outbuilding to the rear, is a 17th-century building that was remodeled in the 19th century and divided into two dwellings. It is a single pile structure with two storeys and an attic, along with a cellar beneath the right side. The building is constructed of rendered rubble and features a slate roof, raised gable ends with dressed stone coping and kneelers, and three brick stacks with oversailing courses, including two end stacks and a ridge stack located to the left of the centre. There is a projecting early 19th-century wing at the rear left, with exposed rubble walls, brick dentil eaves, a slate roof, and a brick side stack.

The front of the building has three windows on both the ground and first floors, all of which are six-pane sashes. There are three slate-hung roof dormers featuring two-light modern casements. A modern open-fronted porch is located to the right of centre, 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 beneath a brick cambered head, complete with external shutters. At the rear of 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.

The properties are separated by 19th-century plain rounded railings and gates. The outbuildings consist of a two-storey block made of stone rubble with a slate roof, featuring large double doors and a loft door, and an adjoining single-storey block that has been converted into a garage.

No 1 was modernized in 1984, which obscured the original plan; the stairs were replaced, and a beam with a 5-inch chamfer was removed. 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 interior also features a massive internal chimney stack and period plank doors with large H-L hinges. No 2 has six-panel doors, 17th-century chamfered beams with run-out stops, and exposed joists.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2025
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