Llwyngwair Manor Hotel is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 15 January 1952. House.
Llwyngwair Manor Hotel
- WRENN ID
- rough-lead-holly
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Pembrokeshire Coast National Park
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 15 January 1952
- Type
- House
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
Llwyngwair Manor Hotel is a rendered two-storey building with an attic, featuring a nine-window front. The central porch bay projects and is gabled, topped with concrete roof tiles and rendered stacks. The windows are 12-pane sashes, with the ground floor windows being longer. The centre has bracket eaves on the sides, suggesting that similar eaves were originally present on the main house and gable, although these have been simplified. The pedimental gable includes a tripartite lunette, a Venetian tripartite sash on the first floor, and a ground floor door set back in a flush porch with two squat columns, likely from the early 19th century, and a shallow arch. Inside the porch are double doors with margin-glazed side-lights and an overlight. There are four flat six-pane dormers, two on each side. The end elevations are obscured by 20th-century additions.
The rear of the building is complex, featuring a stair gable of the main house that is recessed between further projecting gabled wings, which have sash windows and brick window heads. A similar range runs parallel to the front range to the west.
Inside, the five-bay entrance hall showcases early to mid-18th century style panelling, with raised panels and elliptical-arched recesses. The three-bay section to the east appears to be original and was presumably previously separate from the hall area, which may have been panelled to match when the spaces were combined. Matching panelling is also found within the porch, which has shallow plaster vaulting. From the entrance hall, a narrow archway leads to a short stair with a panelled dado and an arched stair light at the half-landing, from which flights branch off on each side. The stair features a thick rail and square newels.
The rooms to the west of the hall are at a considerably lower level, indicating a more complex building history. Although much has been altered for hotel use, the first room contains an ornate bolection moulded fireplace with a cartouche above and pine-cone drops on each side under Ionic capitals, likely from the early 18th century. The room at the west end features an early 19th century marble fireplace.
More on this building
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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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