Wiln House is a Grade II listed building in the Pembrokeshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 14 July 1981. A Early C19 Residential.

Wiln House

WRENN ID
waning-bailey-sorrel
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Pembrokeshire
Country
Wales
Date first listed
14 July 1981
Type
Residential
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

Wiln House is a terraced house dating from the early 19th century, featuring painted stucco with a slate close-eaved roof that is hipped to the right. The right end has a renewed red brick stack. The house has three storeys and a cellar, with a two-window range and brick dentilled eaves. The window openings are adorned with 19th-century quarter-round stopped mouldings, similar to those found at number 115. The hornless sash windows are early 19th-century, with a 16-pane window on the ground floor right, a 12-pane window on the first floor, and a 9-pane window on the top floor. Tooled stone sills are present beneath the windows.

The ground floor features a plinth with a cellar vent to the right and an arched doorway to the left, which has a timber doorcase. This doorcase includes an open pediment on consoles above thin panelled piers, a fluted band at the impost level, and entablature blocks beneath the pediment. The earlier 19th-century fanlight has tracery with marginal glazing bars, a central roundel, and four small roundels in the margins. The six-panel door consists of four sunk panels and two flush panels with reeded borders, and there is a bootscraper present.

At the rear, there is a large southwest wing with a red brick stack on the west side and some slate-hanging on the west wall. This wing has a basement and three storeys, with a conservatory at ground floor level featuring arched side windows, an arched door, and a 12-pane sash window on each floor above.

Inside, the entrance hall to the left includes a fanlight with intersecting tracery. To the right, there is a six-panel door leading to the front room. The early 19th-century staircase located behind the front room has four flights, straight balusters, scrolled tread ends, a ramped rail, and bulbous turned newels. The rear room features an undercut leaf cornice and a scrolled ceiling border, along with a six-panel door and shutters leading to a French window. Additionally, there is a ground floor rear sun-lounge that has an arched 19th-century window with intersecting tracery, and a kitchen located at the basement level at the rear.

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