Courtyard of outbuildings at Hayston Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 10 November 2004. Outbuildings.
Courtyard of outbuildings at Hayston Hall
- WRENN ID
- odd-timber-saffron
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Pembrokeshire
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 10 November 2004
- Type
- Outbuildings
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
The courtyard of outbuildings at Hayston Hall dates to the 18th century and is constructed of rubble stone with close-eaved slate roofs. It comprises three ranges: a long, hipped, two-storey main range, a two-storey range attached to the left corner with a hipped roof to its left end, and a single-storey range attached to the front range to the right.
The main range is two storeys high and six bays wide, with a hipped, close-eaved roof. It features six cambered-headed square windows with nine panes to the loft, set within cambered brick surrounds; the window on the left is spaced wider than the others. Slate sills are present to the fourth and sixth windows, while the fifth is partially obscured by the roof of the projecting single-storey addition. The original roughcast with whitewash and colourwash survives on the right end, beyond the added range. The ground floor has grey limestone cambered heads to the first and third bays; the left window has an inserted nine-pane casement, and the other bay is now infilled. Red brick cambered-arched entries are found in the second and fourth bays, the left one retaining boarded double doors, and the right one blocked by a later addition. The sixth bay, beyond the addition, has a blocked door with a late 19th-century yellow brick surround. The right end wall is rendered and windowless. The rear elevation is whitewashed rubble, with part of the roof reclad in corrugated asbestos. Outside stone steps lead to a loft door at the extreme right, and three loft windows of varying shapes are visible. The ground floor has two large inserted garage entries in the centre and to the left, and a 20th-century metal window to the extreme left.
The range on the left side of the courtyard has a slightly lower eaves height and is gable-ended where it meets the corner of the main range. It has a hipped roof with a tall brick stack on the left end wall. It has two nine-pane loft windows with cambered brick heads, the one to the right of centre being slightly narrower. On the ground floor, there is a late 19th-century yellow brick-headed door to the extreme right, and a late 19th-century yellow brick cambered-arched coach entry to the left of centre, which is not aligned with the window above; this has been infilled with stone and a red-brick surround to a panelled door. Hornless nine-pane sash windows, also inserted, are set in red brick surrounds with slate sills, on either side of the coach entry. The left end wall has no windows, and a 20th-century rear lean-to addition is present.
The range on the right side of the courtyard is single-storey with a hipped roof to the right end, having lower eaves on the end wall, which is edged with red brick. The front has a broad opening to the left and centre, and is infilled with timber and whitewashed rubble to the right. The end wall has two doors with a small window to the left, all within brick frames. The rear is a windowless whitewashed rubble wall.
On the ground floor of the left side of the main range, one section contains a stable with two cast-iron stall dividers and boarded panelling, as well as three iron and enamel troughs. The left range has been converted into a house, with a fireplace in the left room, a small staircase with stick balusters in the centre of the room, and a fireplace with a grate in the right room. The right part of that range is open to the roof.
More on this building
Sign in or create a free account to unlock:
- 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
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.
Nearby listed buildings
- Lofted outbuilding at Hayston Hall
- Hayston Hall
- Hayston Bridge (partly in Rosemarket community)
- Haystone Bridge (partly in Llanstadwell community)
- Great Harmeston
- Long agricultural range to W of Great Harmeston House, including cartsheds and food processing store
- Milepost near Redstock Bridge
- Church of St Ismael
- Upper Harmeston
- Rosemarket dovecote