Gable End is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 26 April 1977. Villa.
Gable End
- WRENN ID
- kindled-cinder-sedge
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Pembrokeshire Coast National Park
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 26 April 1977
- Type
- Villa
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
Gable End is part of a large villa built in the Tudor Gothic style, featuring white-painted stucco and steep slate roofs with deep eaves and decorative bargeboards. The building has timber mullioned and transomed windows with hoodmoulds, and the casements include marginal glazing bars beneath top-lights, with two lights in each casement. There are five gables adorned with intricate pierced bargeboards and pointed finials; two of these are of different sizes on the main wing that projects to the right, while three eaves gables are on the left wing, now known as Gable End.
The Gables section occupies the two bays on the right, which project and contain the principal rooms. The north front features the largest gable on the left, with a rendered stack on the left side wall, and a smaller gable on the right. This side has two 3-light transomed windows on the first floor and two ornate Tudor-style canted bay windows on the ground floor, which have moulded cornices and Tudor-arched heads for both the casements and top-lights. The west elevation has a similar arrangement with a large gable to the left and a small gable to the right, featuring 3-light and 2-light upper windows, a plain tripartite 2-4-2-pane sash window on the ground floor to the right, and a 20th-century stuccoed porch to the left.
Gable End itself occupies the wing set back to the left, consisting of three bays, with the right two bays closely spaced. It has three first-floor 2-light windows under the gables, and on the ground floor, there are two large 3-light windows and a Tudor-arched door at the extreme right, angled towards The Gables. The door features a moulded timber surround, double doors, and double half-glazed Tudor-arched doors within.
At the rear, there is a parallel range that gives a twin-gabled east end, with similar bargeboards and two 3-light first-floor windows above another window on the ground floor to the left, and a canted bay window with a 1-2-1 light configuration to the right, with similar glazing. The rear wall is constructed of rubble stone and features a similar 2-light window under the eaves to the left, a 20th-century window below, and a porch.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- Sale history — 2 transactions since 2009
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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