113 Main Street is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 14 July 1981. House. 1 related planning application.

113 Main Street

WRENN ID
weathered-landing-jay
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Pembrokeshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
14 July 1981
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

Also on this page: sale history · EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

This large town house, located at 113 Main Street, is attached to the larger No 111 on the right and the smaller No 115 on the left. It features painted stucco that mimics ashlar stone, brick dentilled eaves, and a slate gabled roof with a modern red brick chimney on the left side. The building stands three storeys high with a cellar and has a three-window range that is offset to the right. The windows are hornless 12-pane sashes with stone sills, with shorter windows on the top floor.

A central flight of six stone steps, flanked by iron railings, leads up to the doorway, which is framed by a columned doorcase. This includes Roman Doric half-columns, an entablature, and a six-panel fielded door with a plain overlight. There is also a ledged door to the cellar at the right end. The rear of the house is slate-hung and features a very tall staircase window that is three panes wide.

Inside, the entrance passage leads to a front room on the west side, which has a thin cornice and a fielded-panelled six-panel door. This room includes a 19th-century fossil marble fireplace and double-door cupboards on either side with panelled doors, as well as panelled shutters. An elliptical archway with pilasters leads into the hall. The rear right staircase has square balusters, a ramped moulded rail, and a closed string, with four flights leading up to the attic.

On the landing, there is a fielded-panelled six-panel door leading to the rear east room, which was formerly inscribed 'Jelly's height' with a date of 1770 or 1780, now overpainted. An alcove to the south, which was a former butler's pantry, has been opened out. This room connects to the front east room, which features a cornice and panelled shutters. The first floor includes panelled doors, some of which are fielded-panelled, and a cornice in a small middle room. The west bedroom has a reeded ceiling border. The attic contains one two-panel door on the landing and panelled shutters, while the west room has a panelled cupboard door on the south wall and an iron grate dating from around 1900.

The staircase leading down to the basement has a renewed balustrade and two flights. There is a two-panel fielded-panelled door to a cupboard on the landing. The basement includes an east side kitchen with an elliptical-arched brick head featuring a keystone. A recess by the fireplace may indicate a former outside door, suggesting that No 115 was added later.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 3 transactions since 1999
  • Related listed building consents — 1 application
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Front garden wall & gates to No. 113 Main Street Grade II 9 m
  2. 115 Main Street Grade II 12 m
  3. Penfro Grade II* 14 m
  4. Front garden wall, railings, gatepiers & gate to No 111, with penny postage stamp machine to right Grade II 18 m
  5. Old Cross Saws Inn Grade II 28 m
  6. 104 Main Street Grade II 37 m
  7. Hay's House / Arthur's House Grade II 40 m
  8. Camrose House and forecourt railings Grade II 41 m
  9. Eaton House and forecourt railings Grade II 45 m
  10. Gatepiers and gates to St Michael's Churchyard Grade II 47 m