Sunnybank, including attached outbuildings. is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 17 May 2004. House, outbuildings. 1 related planning application.

Sunnybank, including attached outbuildings.

WRENN ID
crooked-rood-primrose
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Pembrokeshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
17 May 2004
Type
House, outbuildings
Source
Cadw listing

Description

Sunnybank is a mid-19th century farmhouse with attached outbuildings, modernised around the year 2000. The main house is of unpainted render with a corrugated sheet roof and rebuilt brick end stacks. It is two stories high, with a three-window front. The windows are 12-pane sashes, replacing earlier 16-pane sashes, set within concrete sills. The front door is 19th century, with a large central panel, a panel below, a radiating-bar fanlight with marginal glazing, and a raised rusticated arched surround. New or renewed channelled pilasters frame the window heads, which incorporate keystones. A narrow forecourt features short spearhead rails on a dwarf rubble stone wall, with urns on stanchions; there is one central gate and another at the left end. A windowless wall occupies the left end of the house.

A rear range, dating back to around 1800, presents as a double-fronted house with brick chimneys, one on the ridge to the right of the door and another at the left end. This range is also rendered, matching the main house. It has two 12-pane sashes on each floor, plus a central board door, all set within slate sills.

Continuous to a whitewashed rubble stone outbuilding range, uphill to the left, with a grouted slate roof. The first section is lofted and has paired brick-headed casement windows on the upper floor, above an elliptical-arched cart-entry and a later 20th-century metal window. The cart-entry features painted, tooled stone voussoirs to a recessed arch with a keystone. Further to the left is a doorway with a painted, tooled stone recessed head and broad keystone, followed by a tall, blank recess with a slate sill and brick head, set under the eaves. Beyond this lies the rear of a barn, marked by three vent loops. Attached to the left is a low pigsty with two vent loops, and a small duck house is attached at the left end with a lower roof. All roofs are grouted.

Facing the farm court to the rear, the outbuildings are of rubble stone with grouted slate roofs. A small duck house to the right has a small door and a tiny window in the end wall, and a door on the front. A pigsty next is distinguished by two red brick arched entries. The main range has grey limestone cornerstones and a vent loop in the end gable. The front features another vent loop to the right, two doors with grey limestone sides and brick heads, a 20th-century metal window between, a window with a brick head and stone sill to the left, a sunk door with a brick head to the ground floor of the lofted section, outside steps to a loft door under a slate-hung gable, and finally a ground floor casement-pair window with a brick head. To the rear of the main house, a lower roofed section features an asbestos sheet and 12-pane sashes with brick heads, along with a lean-to porch in the angle of the mid-19th century front range.

The interior of the property was not fully inspected, yet the rear wing of the house contains an end fireplace with a very broad cambered beam.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.