Former Wesleyan Methodist Chapel is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 1 July 1974. Pumping station.
Former Wesleyan Methodist Chapel
- WRENN ID
- crooked-flagstone-thistle
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Pembrokeshire
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 1 July 1974
- Type
- Pumping station
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
The Former Wesleyan Methodist Chapel is a two-storey building, constructed in painted stucco and topped with a hipped slate roof. It features a three-bay front raised on a basement, with arch-headed windows and doors. The design includes a stucco plinth, outer giant pilasters, and a raised narrow centre section, complete with an entablature and cornice that projects over the centre. The top parapet is adorned with panelled blocks over the pilasters and a shallow-gabled block at the centre, which displays a plaque reading 'Wesleyan Chapel'.
The upper section has three windows with small-paned glazing and marginal glazing bars, while the ground floor centre has a larger window of the same style. All windows are set within later 19th-century surrounds featuring pilasters, moulded arches, keystones, and sill brackets. There are two doors framed by later 19th-century stucco doorcases, which have moulded architraves, widely separated quoins, keystones, and cornices supported by long console brackets, with coved stops on the cornices. Above the plain doors are complex radiating-bar fanlights.
The right side wall facing Chapel Lane is made of unpainted stucco and is two-storey high, featuring arched windows, with four above and three below (the third bay has no window). These windows have earlier 19th-century Gothic intersecting glazing bars and slate sills. A red brick chimney is located at the right end of the building.
Attached to the left side is a lower two-storey extension built in 1910, which has three bays and a hipped roof behind a cornice and parapet. This extension includes three arched upper windows with radiating bars in their heads, set in stucco surrounds with keystones. The ground floor features two square-headed six-pane windows with long keystones under open pediments, and a broad door in the left bay with a head at a lower level, also surrounded by a similar keystone and open pediment.
Inside, the chapel has been stripped of its fittings. Originally, it featured a gallery supported by wooden Ionic columns and a richly designed pulpit with concave sides and fluted pilasters.
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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