Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
87473
Building Number
1&2  
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
23/03/2006  
Date of Amendment
23/03/2006  
Name of Property
1&2 Green Street, including attached stable and boundary wall  
Address
1&2 Green Street  

Location


Unitary Authority
Ceredigion  
Community
Cardigan  
Town
Cardigan  
Locality
 
Easting
217760  
Northing
245932  
Street Side
 
Location
Prominently sited on the approach to Cardigan Castle. The buildings front directly on to Green Street, but have a rear yard (containing detached former brewhouse) which has modern wall and railings, incorporating gates relocated from Cardigan gaol.  

Description


Broad Class
Domestic  
Period
 

History
The buildings are thought to be early C18, and show on Speed's map of the town of 1715. Their layout and construction are of firmly traditional character, and they would seem to be amongst the few buildings in the town to pre-date its major building phases of the later C18 and early C19. They appear to have been built as a pair, but were extended with the addition of rear outshuts in two phases. The cottages (both of which had for a time been in use as public houses) had fallen into a state of disrepair by the early C20, and have been sympathetically restored, combining the two former dwellings into a single property used as offices on inspection in August 2005.  

Exterior
Pair of cottages; rubble stone with coloured limewash (a restoration of the historical finish); slate roofs with (rebuilt) stone gable end stacks. One and a half storeyed, each cottage a 2-unit plan with off-centre entrance. Panelled doors reproduce a traditional Cardigan style, and flanking windows (restored in original openings with timber lintels and renewed slate sills) are 12-pane sashes. Upper windows are cat-slide dormers with 6-pane sashes, aligned with the lower windows but with an additional window to right of doorway in number 1. At rear, added outshuts of slightly differing heights, the doors flanked by small-paned casement windows, and reconstructed brick stack between the two units. Attached to the rear of number 2 is the former stable, built as a lean-to against the boundary wall of the castle: also rubble with slate roof; central doorway and flanking windows. Beyond the stable, the rear boundary is a high rubble stone wall.  

Interior
Original layouts modified but still discernable: each cottage once comprised two-unit plan with central through passage, though internal partitions have been lost, and the two cottages are now linked at each floor by doors cut through the original dividing wall. Much of the original internal structure survives, including the (apparently re-used) cross-beams supporting the upper floor (the floor itself partially removed in number 2), and the roof trusses (rough principal rafters with high-set collars). Simnai fawr survives in number 2, including small cast-iron range and brick domed bread oven; rear outshut of this cottage also retains corner fireplace with small cast-iron range.  

Reason for designation
Listed as rare surviving early buildings in the town, unusual as vernacular buildings surviving in an urban context, sensitively restored to enhance their traditional character.  

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





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