Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
13432
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
04/06/1989  
Date of Amendment
26/04/2002  
Name of Property
Church of St Dochdwy  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Vale of Glamorgan  
Community
Llandough  
Town
Cardiff  
Locality
Llandough  
Easting
316808  
Northing
173273  
Street Side
N  
Location
Prominently sited on high ground overlooking Cardiff Bay to E and at the junction between Llandough Hill, Penlan Road and Leckwith Road with small village green in front and within a large walled churchyard.  

Description


Broad Class
Religious, Ritual and Funerary  
Period
 

History
Important Early Christian site. The nationally important pre-Conquest cross-shaft (Irbici) (Scheduled Ancient Monument: GM 209) stands to SW of church. Present church consecrated 1866. Designed by Samuel Charles Fripp, architect of Bristol, and built by David Jones of Penarth at cost of £2,600, its polychrome brickwork and Gothic Geometric style influenced by Butterfield's church of St Augustine in nearby Penarth.  

Exterior
Gothic Revival church. Plan of nave with small W porch, N and S aisles and SE tower over organ chamber, short chancel and N vestry. Built of snecked rubble lias limestone with freestone dressings; slate roofs with crucifix finials to gable apexes, moulded kneelers, coping, parapets, corbelled eaves, low buttresses with stepped coping. Windows are pointed-arched, main ones with Geometric tracery of roundels incorporating trefoils, quatrefoils and cinquefoils, with hoodmoulds. Low buttresses with stepped coping; plinth. W front has a wide 5-light traceried window over shallow gabled porch which has continuous roll-moulding to the pointed entrance arch; inside are brick facings, a large C18 tombstone and segmental arch to W door; lancets to aisle ends. S aisle with separate roof pitch has three 3-light traceried windows. The tall and dominating SE saddleback tower has roundels in apex, paired louvred lancets below; 2-light or single traceried louvred openings to belfry; string courses; at ground level at SE is a narrow shouldered doorway up 6 steps and stairs down to basement. Chancel has lancet at SE and 4-light E window with pronounced moulded sill band. Vestry at NE has a similar wider doorway and further stairs to basement. N aisle similar to S aisle.  

Interior
Interior of red brick with polychrome brick decoration, notably in the spandrels of the nave arcade, and yellow freestone dressings. 6-bay nave roof of arched- braced trusses, rising from corbels and pierced with quatrefoils; lower longitudinal beam, boarded ceiling. 3-bay arcades comprising round piers, roll-moulded arches and wide capitals in cornice form; no clerestory. At SE the doorway to organ chamber is Romanesque in style and possibly incorporates Romanesque chevron moulded masonry; plain imposts. At SW and standing on a stone and tile platform is the font, a plain round bowl with conical cover. Boarded floor except for flagged aisles. At SE nave an old chest; at NW a Royal Arms. Pointed moulded chancel arch without piers, the inner moulding rising from corbels with foliage enrichment. Plain stone pulpit with foliage band. Chancel has ribbed roof, moulded band to walls continuing over vestry door. Father Willis organ in chamber to S retains plaque Henry Willis and Sons. Wooden reredos incorporates a war memorial; chancel stalls 1934.  

Reason for designation
Listed as a prominent Gothic Revival church by a regional architect occupying an important Early Christian site.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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