No 93 and forecourt railings is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 29 July 2005. House.
No 93 and forecourt railings
- WRENN ID
- distant-vestry-pigeon
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Pembrokeshire
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 29 July 2005
- Type
- House
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
No 93 is a house that was formerly a manse, built from rock-faced grey limestone squared rubble stone, featuring Bath stone quoins and dressings, topped with slate eaved roofs. The building has a T-plan layout, consisting of two storeys and an attic, with a crosswing that projects to the left. It stands on a raised plinth, and the gables have overhanging verges. The roof is adorned with red terracotta cresting and has a stone chimney on the ridge of the west wing, which also has Bath stone quoins.
The main floor windows are long plate-glass sashes set in Bath stone chamfered flush surrounds, with the chamfers stopped at the top of each jamb. The crosswing features a pointed attic window and paired sashes on the first and ground floors, with the lower sashes being longer and a relieving arch above them. There is a rendered stack on the east side, located on the west wall of No 95. The west wing, which is set back to the right, has two bays, a doorway to the left, and a single window above, with paired windows on each floor to the right. The doorway is chamfered and segmental-pointed, leading to a flush-panelled six-panel door with an overlight, accessed by three stone steps. The west gable end has a similar pointed attic window and paired sashes on the first floor, while the ground floor features a curved bay with lozenge slates on the curved roof and three long sashes. The south wall is blank, and the rear wing is rendered with a stack on the west side wall.
The front railings extend from the gate by the corner of the crosswing to a stone pier at the east end of the Tabernacle chapel forecourt rails. The gate has two small Gothic cast-iron gatepiers topped with Gothic finials, a 20th-century gate with spearhead rails and dog-bars. To the right, there is a low rubble wall with chamfered rock-faced grey stone coping and low cast-iron railings similar to those at the chapel, featuring Gothic leaf finials on alternate uprights, many of which are broken. A central square stanchion has a larger finial.
Inside, the hallway boasts 19th-century coloured floor tiles and an ornate plaster cornice with modillions and rosettes. The staircase is positioned at right angles to the left of the hall, featuring chamfered square balusters and newels with finials.
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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