Full Report for Listed Buildings
The list description is not intended to be a complete inventory of what is listed: it is principally intended to aid identification. By law, the definition of a listed building includes the entire building (i) and any structure or object that is fixed to the said building and ancillary to it and (ii) any other structure or object that forms part of the land and has done so since before 1 July 1948, and was within the curtilage of the building, and ancillary to it, on the date on which said building was first included in the list, or on 1 January 1969, whichever was later.
Date of Designation
15/08/1991
Date of Amendment
17/02/1998
Name of Property
Jennings Warehouse
Unitary Authority
Bridgend
Locality
Porthcawl Harbour
Location
Situated on the west quay of the harbour just North of the Breakwater and S of the surviving harbour basin.
History
Built 1832 by James Allen, the proprietor of a spelter works at Dyffryn, as the S terminus of the Dyffryn Llynfi Porthcawl horsedrawn tramroad which was built under an Act of 1825 to transport iron and coal from the Llynfi valley; the Act provided for a new harbour at Pwll Cawl, a rocky promontory amidst the surrounding sand dunes or warrens. Total cost £60,000. Shown on Tithe Map of 1846 and described in the apportionment as a 'warehouse of the Llynfi Iron Company' leased from the Dyffryn Llynfi and Porthcawl Railway Company. It was used as a store for iron and iron goods awaiting shipment and is much larger than the few other surviving examples, perhaps as a result of high early expectations of a trading future, or to provide for storage during bad weather, as at some periods the dock was only fully in use during the summer months. Name dates from 1911 when it was used by Jennings and Co, timber importers. In 1920s was part of Cosy Corner site, with Cosy Corner cinema, a converted aeroplane hanger, and Pierrot stage erected to W; to NW was an outdoor roller skating rink with the first floor of Jennings building also being used as a roller skating rink; to N was the Salt Lake for Swimming and Boating created from the former inner dock and to S was the slipway and harbour where paddle steamers called for day trips. In Second World War warehouse became a base for RAF Air Sea Rescue Launch.
Exterior
A large 2 storeyed building, 15 bays long, 5 bays wide. Built of limestone rubble with stone and brick dressings, some replaced with concrete, rendered to rear W, and S; hipped slate roof, terracotta ridge tiles, inserted skylights. All openings currently boarded. Regularly spaced window openings to first floor mostly have cambered arched heads with brick voussoirs, dressed stone surrounds and sills. Ground floor harbour frontage (E) has 6 remodelled square headed windows and 3 large segmental arched openings of former loading bay. Frontage facing inner dock (N) has one segmental arched doorway at ground floor and formerly two between the two storeys, one remodelled; town frontage (W) has chimneys; breakwater frontage (S) has large double doors inserted.
Interior
No access to interior closed for repair and conversion (March 1997).
Reason for designation
Listed as a rare example of a very early railway company warehouse, for its important connections with the South Wales Iron industry, and for its importance as one of the founding buildings of Porthcawl which originated with the harbour; group value with the Lighthouse, the Outer Basin, the Breakwater, the Old Customs House, the Look-out Tower.
Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]