Llewellyn Almshouses, including Boundary Walls is a Grade II listed building in the Neath Port Talbot local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 5 January 1989. Outbuilding.
Llewellyn Almshouses, including Boundary Walls
- WRENN ID
- final-minaret-yew
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Neath Port Talbot
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 5 January 1989
- Type
- Outbuilding
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
The Llewellyn Almshouses comprise a linear range of eight cottages arranged in reflected pairs, with a two-story central cross range serving as a common room and warden’s cottage. The buildings are constructed of red brick and half-timber, with red sandstone dressings. The end elevations feature projecting stacks, the left-hand stack bearing an escutcheon displaying the initials "L 1897 AD" and a family crest.
The central range has gables with deep verges, billet-moulded bargeboards, and pendants, with a tile-hung gable end. The first floor of the half-timbered sections is jettied on brackets, displaying exposed joists. Tall panels incorporate four-light windows with rectangular lead cames, creating over-square decorated panels. A rectangular sandstone bay window on the ground floor has a casement-moulded band featuring animals. The window features four-light cusped transomed panel tracery with lead cames and inset heraldic glass. Each pair of cottages is topped by a pair of gabled half-timbered dormers. The red tile roofs have deep verges and billet-moulded bargeboards with pendants. The gables are close-studded to the inner pairs and have decorative framing to the outer ones, with billet-moulded bressumers on ogee brackets supporting carved corbels, revealing exposed joints. The windows are four-light, cusped, panel tracery windows with returned stopped labels and lead cames. Entrance bays are recessed under the main roof, creating porches, and contain single-light windows with lead cames and original plank doors, glazed with cames. Original fittings remain. Stone architraves frame the entrances.
The rear elevations are simpler, with a paired tripartite arrangement to each pair of cottages, consisting of a narrow rectangular window and door flanking a broader, ogee-headed window with a continuous label. Sashes and half-glazed doors are present. The first floor of the cross range is tile-hung with a bipartite sash window. A single-storey, gabled red brick extension with a red tile roof and bargeboards is also present.
High, contemporary brick boundary walls with tile capping run along the rear and right end. Iron railings are set on low walls with stone-capped piers along Gnoll Park Road. Former privies and coal sheds along the rear wall have been removed. The layout of the grounds to the front of the almshouses remains as per the original design.
Internally, the cross range has been largely modernised. The cottages retain recessed inglenooks with fire windows, panelled over-mantels, Tudor arched chimney pieces, beamed ceilings, built-in dressers, and mostly retain panelled walls.
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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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