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
25/07/1994
Date of Amendment
25/07/1994
Name of Property
Costain Buildings at Rydal School
Location
Forms two sides of courtyard on the E side of the school dining hall, and bounded by Landsdowne Road and Queen’s Drive.
History
Rydal School was founded in 1885 by a leading Methodist educationalist, T G Osborn. The Costain building was added to the growing school complex in 1927-30 as science laboratories etc and the Memorial Hall, which extends the L-plan Costain building to the S, was added in 1955-7. Both buildings were designed by S Colwyn Foulkes, architect, of Colwyn Bay.
Exterior
Coursed and squared sandstone rubble with plain tiled roofs. 2 storeyed, L-plan, with low corner towner at angle. Simplified Tudor detailing. On the courtyard side, the N range has a gable marking its W angle, with canted bay window with mullioned and transomed lights, and paired windows above. Beyond it is a cloister of 5 bays, with small 2 and 3-light mullioned windows in the upper storey. High parapet. W-facing range is similarly detailed, with 3x3-light mullioned and transomed windows to ground floor, and similar windows above. Segmentally arched doorway to right gives access to broad through-passage which forms the lobby of the Memorial Hall. Street elevations have a more detailed relief, with wide mullioned and transomed windows in each bay, divided by blind traceried panels. Corner tower has angle buttresses and oriel windows in 2 faces, and is surmounted by an embattled parapet. Memorial Hall has 3 high-set lights to its left, with quatrefoil frieze above, then is articulated as 3 bays, divided by buttresses which terminate in coupled finials; each bay has a 3-tier 2-light mullioned and transomed window. Buttressed fly-tower to the S, with very narrow lights and a shallow pyramidal roof behind a parapet. Its austere S-facing elevation is relieved by a series of slight pilaster buttresses.
Interior
The Costain Building is planned with corridors along its two inner faces (serving as a cloister on the N range), and retains the original internal layout.
Reason for designation
The Costain Building is a highly refined interpretation of the collegiate architectural style, sensitive to its site, and articulating precisely defined functions.
Group Description
Costain Building and Memorial Hall at Rydal School, Colwyn Bay
Coursed and squared sandstone rubble with plain tiled roofs. 2 storeyed, L-plan, with low corner towner at angle. Simplified Tudor detailing. On the courtyard side, the N range has a gable marking its W angle, with canted bay window with mullioned and transomed lights, and paired windows above. Beyond it is a cloister of 5 bays, with small 2 and 3-light mullioned windows in the upper storey. High parapet. W-facing range is similarly detailed, with 3x3-light mullioned and transomed windows to ground floor, and similar windows above. Segmentally arched doorway to right gives access to broad through-passage which forms the lobby of the Memorial Hall. Street elevations have a more detailed relief, with wide mullioned and transomed windows in each bay, divided by blind traceried panels. Corner tower has angle buttresses and oriel windows in 2 faces, and is surmounted by an embattled parapet. Memorial Hall has 3 high-set lights to its left, with quatrefoil frieze above, then is articulated as 3 bays, divided by buttresses which terminate in coupled finials; each bay has a 3-tier 2-light mullioned and transomed window. Buttressed fly-tower to the S, with very narrow lights and a shallow pyramidal roof behind a parapet. Its austere S-facing elevation is relieved by a series of slight pilaster buttresses.
Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]