Jordanston Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 10 February 1994. House.

Jordanston Hall

WRENN ID
rough-lead-curlew
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Pembrokeshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
10 February 1994
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

Jordanston Hall is a house from the mid to late 18th century, likely incorporating a late 17th-century core. It features whitewashed roughcast walls, slate roofs, and roughcast stacks, with a larger stack at the south end and a smaller one on the ridge. The building is two storeys high and has an eight-window range, with a hipped wing projecting at the north end. The left two-window range served as a service wing, with its door and window set lower than the others. A modillion timber eaves cornice adds detail to the roofline.

The windows consist of 9-pane sashes on the first floor and 12-pane sashes on the ground floor, except for a small tripartite window in the service range on the ground floor. Four of the first-floor windows remain unaltered, along with two ground-floor windows in the third and fourth bays; the rest were replaced around 1993 with hardwood plate glass windows. The service door is located in the second bay, while the main door, which is a 6-panel hardwood door in a hardwood doorcase, is in the fifth bay. There is a lean-to structure on the south end.

The north crosswing has a south-facing two-window range, with hardwood windows above and a decayed plate glass sash and a horned 12-pane sash below. The east end of this wing is windowless. The north side features a hipped roof, a brick-panelled side-wall stack, and a three-window range of plate glass sashes with brick heads, plus a one-window addition at the west end. The rear of the house has an added projection to the left and a two-storey centre that extends about 1.5 meters from the original rear wall, which had a lateral stack; the late 20th-century roof now extends to the eaves. To the right is a hipped stair tower with three superimposed small plate glass sashes. There is also a lean-to added to the rear of the service range on the right.

The south end of the building was separated into a separate house around 1960, and the stair in the stair tower was removed. Some shutters remain in the room to the left of the main entry, while the ground floor has otherwise been altered. A lateral fireplace is located in the rear wall of the right room. The walls are thick, approximately 1.25 meters, and appear to be continuous, although the original rear wall is now internal.

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