Hayston Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 10 November 2004. House.

Hayston Hall

WRENN ID
salt-transept-thyme
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Pembrokeshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
10 November 2004
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

Hayston Hall is a house constructed with unpainted lined stucco and features a slate hipped eaves roof with red brick end stacks. The building is plain and three-storey with a three-window front that includes a plinth, quoins, flat eaves, and late 19th-century plate-glass sash windows. The upper windows are shorter, while the ground floor windows are tripartite, indicating they are enlargements of original single-sash openings, which have been enlarged on the inner side. In the center, there is a blank elliptical arched recess with a keystone that replaces a door. The openings have thin quarter-round mouldings that stop before the angles.

Each end wall has one window on the upper floor, set towards the rear. The ground floor features a hipped lean-to on the right, while the left end has a late 19th-century gabled porch aligned with the windows above. The porch is enclosed with fishscale slating on the roof, has a Gothic segmental-pointed entry, and bargeboards, with a half-glazed door inside.

At the rear, there is a wing attached to the right, with stair windows to the left of center, including a 12-pane sash above a long 18-pane sash. There is also a four-pane sash on the ground floor to the right. The long two-storey rear range is made of rubble stone, with unpainted render on the rear, and features brick window heads for the plate glass sashes, along with a small brick stack on the right end. The five bays are irregularly spaced, and the window and door of the last bay appear to be 20th-century replacements for previously blocked windows just to the left. A lean-to enclosed porch is located in the second bay, and the extreme right of the rear has a small Gothic window with late 19th-century stained glass depicting a female figure named 'Irene', which is part of the late 19th-century entrance hall.

The interior has not been inspected but is said to have been remodeled in the late 19th century, featuring a large new stair hall with an open-well stair. The left side opens into the rear wing, which formerly housed the kitchens.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Lofted outbuilding at Hayston Hall Grade II 37 m
  2. Courtyard of outbuildings at Hayston Hall Grade II 46 m
  3. Hayston Bridge (partly in Rosemarket community) Grade II 347 m
  4. Haystone Bridge (partly in Llanstadwell community) Grade II 353 m
  5. Great Harmeston Grade II 1.2 km
  6. Long agricultural range to W of Great Harmeston House, including cartsheds and food processing store Grade II 1.2 km
  7. Milepost near Redstock Bridge Grade II 1.6 km
  8. Upper Harmeston Grade II 1.7 km
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  10. Rosemarket dovecote Grade II* 1.8 km