Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
21723
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
18/05/1999  
Date of Amendment
18/05/1999  
Name of Property
Trem-y-mynydd, with associated front walls  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Gwynedd  
Community
Pistyll  
Town
Pwllheli  
Locality
Nant Gwrtheyrn  
Easting
234972  
Northing
344882  
Street Side
N  
Location
The village of Porth-y-nant lies at the bottom of a narrow valley NW of Llithfaen. The terrace named Trem-y-mynydd forms the N side of the open square.  

Description


Broad Class
Education  
Period
 

History
Porth-y-nant was the name given to the new settlement planned and built for the exploitation of the granite deposits in Nant Gwrtheyrn, which was begun by Hugh Owen in 1851. The village was built by a new purchaser, Mr Dodd from c1863 and completed by a Mr Benthal. The present houses were built in c1875 by the then quarry operators Kneeshaw and Lupton. It housed workers in two main terraces of dwellings which were considered an advanced provision for quarry workers at the time. The terraces are set around an open communal square, together with company offices, a shop and bakehouse. Later, the manager's house and a chapel, erected in 1878, were added. The village, which continued to serve the three large quarries, Cae'r Nant, Porth-y-nant, and Carreg-y-llam, produced large quantities of granite setts and kerbs, particularly for Manchester, Liverpool and Birkenhead, and continued to operate until 1914. Significant quantities of aggregates and building stone were also produced. The last person left in 1959, and after years of neglect and vandalism, the buildings were revived at the expense of ARC Aggregates as a home for the National Language School sponsored by Dr Carl Iwan Clowes in 1978, its courses beginning in 1982. Trem-y-mynydd, originally called Mountain View, forms the N side of the open square with the manager's house set apart at the W end.  

Exterior
The terrace of 11 houses is built of rubble stonework with slate roofs, hipped at the E end, and stepping down the fall of the ground. Two storeys throughout, the houses are both single and double bays, the smaller with a front parlour, a rear dining room and kitchen. Stairs rise from the front room to the two bedrooms. Doors and windows were renewed after 1978; framed and battened doors with overlights, and 12-pane sash windows with stone sills and lintels. Stone stacks on the part walls. Each house has a walled front garden with access to a walled footpath running down directly to the manager's house. Houses are now named from the W: Can Llaw'r bont, Porth-y-Wawr, Clwydfa, Ty-y-Faner, Treforgan, Rhuthun, Aelhaearn (double), and Dwyfor (also double).  

Interior
The interiors were completely modernised in 1979.  

Reason for designation
Included as a critical component of the mid-later C19 complete new industrial settlement planned by the successful quarries of Nant Gwrtheyrn, considered at the time to be advanced in design due to a rising social awareness of the benefits of good quality provision for quarry workers.  

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





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