Long Stable Range to South is a Grade II* listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 18 January 1974. House.

Long Stable Range to South

WRENN ID
fossil-merlon-furze
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Pembrokeshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
18 January 1974
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

The Long Stable Range to the South is a Grade II* listed building constructed between 1832 and 1834 for the Captain-Superintendent of the Royal Dockyard. It was designed to match No 1, The Terrace, which is located opposite. The building features tooled squared limestone with a hipped slate roof and two stone ridge stacks. It has a basement and is three stories high, presenting a four-window range with a cornice and low parapet. There is a plinth and a sill band at the first floor.

The upper windows consist of one 12-pane sash, two pairs of casements, and one blind recess. The first floor has 12-pane sashes, with one inserted window between the first two. The ground floor includes recessed arched openings, three small-paned windows, and a 20th-century door with a fanlight in the third bay. The end walls have three windows; the east wall above the lodge (which is listed separately) is mostly blind with one 12-pane sash, while the west wall, which includes an exposed basement storey, creates a four-storey elevation with arched openings at what was the former ground floor. The fenestration has been variously altered.

Attached to the service wing is a long two-storey stable range made of rubble stone. This range has three ridge stacks and various 12-pane sashes across approximately nine bays, with the stable entry located towards the right end and a loft above. A coach house, added after 1858, is situated in a short west return, featuring a large ashlar arch facing north and two 12-pane sashes above. Previously, the coach house was located in the south gable end.

Most of the building has been altered, but there is some plain plasterwork visible in the northwest ground floor room. There is no apparent evidence of the structural ironwork that was used in the earlier Nos 1-3 The Terrace.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. The Port Hotel (formerly listed as the Commodore Club) Grade II* 27 m
  2. Piers and Lodges (formerly listed with Dockyard Wall) Grade II* 32 m
  3. Dockyard Gates Grade II* 41 m
  4. 1 The Terrace Grade II* 49 m
  5. Rear of Garden Walls Grade II 51 m
  6. Coach-House Building to rear of 1 and 2 Grade II 54 m
  7. 2 The Terrace Grade II* 72 m
  8. Rear Garden Walls Grade II 76 m
  9. 3 The Terrace Grade II* 83 m
  10. Coach-House to rear of Grade II 98 m