Tudor Cottage is a Grade II listed building in the Vale of Glamorgan local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 10 September 1982. Graveyard.

Tudor Cottage

WRENN ID
ghost-trefoil-frost
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Vale of Glamorgan
Country
Wales
Date first listed
10 September 1982
Type
Graveyard
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

Tudor Cottage is a two-storey building with an attic, dating back to the 16th century. It features local limestone rubble walls and a Welsh slate gabled roof, which includes gabled dormers and modern brick stacks.

The main street elevation shows a lean-to against the main building at the south-west end, which has a modern panelled door leading to Cherry Tree Cottage. The front wall of the main house includes two 2-light windows on both the ground and first floors, along with a small attic window in each gable. These attic windows are positioned to the east of a roof stack that serves a back-to-back hearth, and there is a blocked doorway and a possible joint in the front wall. Additionally, there is an arched stone doorway with straight-edged jambs.

Now referred to as Tudor Cottage, there is a shallow rectangular storeyed bay window that features a modern 3-light window with a lintel adorned with scored voussoirs on both the ground and first floors, along with a small round-headed single light window from the 16th century in each return. There is also a small single light window in the attic dormer. Further along, there are a 2-light window on the ground floor and a smaller 3-light window on the first floor, both with scratch voussoirs above their heads. Most of the larger windows have been replaced with late 20th-century casements in altered openings and are set under timber lintels. The roof is steeply pitched and has three rebuilt stacks, located on the left gable, at the cross-passage, and centrally for Cherry Tree Cottage.

Tudor Cottage constitutes the left half of the 16th-century house, excluding the main entrance and cross-passage, and has a single-storey addition on the left side. The interior was not inspected during the resurvey, but it appears that no alterations have been made since it was listed in 1982. The house includes the kitchen of the circa 1600 structure and a likely 19th-century in-line addition that contains a second room with a staircase.

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  6. Navron Grade II 146 m
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  9. Boverton Place including attached bee-boles Grade II* 210 m
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