Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
22566
Building Number
110  
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
29/10/1999  
Date of Amendment
29/10/1999  
Name of Property
,110,Newton Road,Newton,Swansea,,SA3 4BN  
Address
110 Newton Road  

Location


Unitary Authority
Swansea  
Community
Mumbles  
Town
Swansea  
Locality
Newton  
Easting
260711  
Northing
188116  
Street Side
N  
Location
Approximately 1km WNW of Oystermouth church and set back from Newton Road.  

Description


Broad Class
Domestic  
Period
 

History
Built c1870 by Benjamin and Alfred Bucknall. Originally known as Glyn-y-coed, it is shown in its present form on the 1880 Ordnance Survey.  

Exterior
A castellated Gothic house built on a sloping site with 2 storeys to the front and 3 storeys to the rear, built of rubble stone with Bath stone dressings, having a steeply-pitched slate roof behind crow-stepped gables on moulded kneelers. Stacks at the ends and behind L of centre, are of stone with tall cylindrical brick pots. The modest entrance front faces the hillside to the N and has sash windows under segmental heads and an eaves corbel table. A central doorway is flanked by sashes and all under a single hood mould. The half-lit door has a plain overlight and is under a segmental head with a frieze of roundels. The fenestration is irregular. Above the doorway are 3 windows with 2 smaller windows further L. In the lower storey are 2 windows L of the doorway, a single casement window further R with a sash window above it. A stack rises centrally from the eaves and to the R is a small roof dormer. In the R gable end is a string course between storeys and a string course and corbel table below the gable. An external stack is offset to the R. The openings are again irregular. Centrally placed are half-lit double doors under a segmental overlight, with a small sash to the L and larger sash at the R end. Above is a sash window to the centre and smaller sash to the L above the string course. The attic has 2 sash windows. In the L gable end the building is 3 storeys and has a retaining wall attached on the R side. Within a shallow projection housing the stacks is a doorway with casement to its R in brick surrounds, leading to service rooms. Above the doorway is a band of rock-faced stone defining the change in storeys. The upper and attic storey windows have moulded architraves and segmental heads. In the upper storey are windows flanking the projection, in the attic are 2 windows placed in a recessed panel between 2 stacks. The rear, or garden front faces the road and was conceived as the principal elevation. There is a banded course between lower and middle and a string course between middle and upper storeys, while the eaves has a corbel table. The lower-storey windows have shouldered lintels, the upper storeys segmental heads and moulded architraves. This asymmetrical elevation is of 7 bays grouped 2:2:3. The centre group are within a projecting cross gable incorporating a half-lit panelled door lower L, upper-storey windows and a single attic window with hood moulds. Roof dormers R and L of the cross gable have pivoting windows.  

Interior
Not inspected.  

Reason for designation
Listed for its architectural interest as a "full-blooded Gothic house" (Newman) retaining original character, by an exceptional regional architect.  

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





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