Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
80740
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
24/09/1951  
Date of Amendment
06/12/2002  
Name of Property
Coach House at Pengwern Hall with Outbuildings Range to W  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Denbighshire  
Community
Bodelwyddan  
Town
 
Locality
Pengwern  
Easting
301900  
Northing
376569  
Street Side
 
Location
At Pengwern Hall, about 20m SW of the main house.  

Description


Broad Class
Domestic  
Period
 

History
The Coach House and its pair Georgian House are said to be dated 1770 on their rainwater heads. They relate formally to the site of the hall, where the predecessor of the present hall evidently stood. The estate was then the property of Sir Edward Lloyd, Bart, who rebuilt the Hall in the 1780s and died in 1795. It later came into the ownership of the Williams family, baronets Bodelwyddan; Sir William Grenville Williams, fourth baronet, lived there until his death in 1904. Under his successor, Sir William Willoughby Williams, the Bodelwyddan property was broken up and Pengwern leased to Col Parry. It was later leased by J H Wynne, and finally bought by Miss Long for a girls'' school. After the closing of the school in 1948 the property fell into decay until taken over by the Society for Mentally Handicapped Children in 1966.  

Exterior
The Coach House and Georgian House are similar buildings intended to frame the forecourt of Pengwern Hall, but they are not quite parallel to eachother; by being built on slightly converging lines, they were probably intended to enhance the theatrical presence of the Hall which was their contemporary (a principle of Baroque planning). The Coach House is of 2-storeys and 5-windows, in Flemish bond brickwork with stone dressings, on a coarsely rendered and white painted plinth; a hipped slate roof with metal ridge and hip covers, and an hexagonal domed cupola. The centre bay is slighly advanced and is pedimented, with a small attic lunette. The doors and windows are fully stone dressed, the lower windows including a pulvinated frieze and cornice, the door with the same plus a pediment. Double main doors with iron studs. Six-pane hornless sash-windows above (that at centre is a 4-pane casement window), 12-pane similar below (one window is a similarly proportioned light with top-hung opener). The rear wing is a 10-bay range facing S, with the central 3-bays pedimented. Similar brickwork and stone dressings, slate roof with tile ridge. There a is one-bay return south at the W extremity to abut the farm buildings. Altered doors and windows, including at rear.  

Interior
 

Reason for designation
A fine late Georgian outbuilding to an important mansion, retaining many original features, and playing an important part in the architectural setting of the Hall.  

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





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