Latitude: 53.1139 / 53°6'50"N
Longitude: -3.3129 / 3°18'46"W
OS Eastings: 312221
OS Northings: 358223
OS Grid: SJ122582
Mapcode National: GBR 6R.7ZQ9
Mapcode Global: WH779.2ZQN
Plus Code: 9C5R4M7P+HV
Entry Name: Hendy
Listing Date: 24 October 1950
Last Amended: 12 July 2006
Grade: II*
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 867
Building Class: Commercial
ID on this website: 300000867
Location: In a block of buildings towards the lower part of the street.
County: Denbighshire
Town: Ruthin
Community: Ruthin (Rhuthun)
Community: Ruthin
Locality: Clwyd Street
Built-Up Area: Ruthin
Traditional County: Denbighshire
Tagged with: Building
A large near-symmetrical C17 timber-framed building, originally with a lobby-entrance. Joseph David Jones, musician and composer, established the Clwyd Bank Academy here. At a later date, Clwyd Bank was a farm-house, with outbuildings, now garages, to the rear. The house is now divided.
32 and 34 Clwyd Street form a group.
Large 5-window range with central gabled porch wing, of 2 storeys with attics. Roughcast over timber-framing on a plinth, under a slate roof with central clustered brick stack. The W gable end is random stone, with a brick stack. To each side of the porch wing is a high gabled attic dormer with small triangular iron-glazed window, and scalloped barge boards. Rear, partly seen, is roughcast, with 3 gabled wings, that to centre probably C19, those flanking, late C20.
No 32 includes the former porch wing and the R-hand part of the main range. The porch wing has a lower ridge-height; it is close-studded to the ground floor, with 2 small square windows with quarries. First floor is square-panelled with a tall wooden cross-window; diamond framing to gable. To R-hand return of porch wing, 2-light casement with quarries (original door position unknown). 2-window main range, with entrance in angle with former porch wing: slated porch canopy, hipped to R end, on a timber post. Inside are 2 mid-late C20 small-pane glazed doors, each with an inner sidelight. The windows are 3-light wooden casements with quarries, that above lean-to porch smaller. Rear has a central 2-storey gabled wing, possibly C19, with a large tripartite window to each storey and a recessed roundel to gable. Further gabled wing to far L, probably late C20.
Interior not seen.
Listed grade II* for its exceptional architectural interest as a large C17 timber-framed lobby-entrance town-house, retaining good detail, the near-symmetrical plan-form with central porch-wing suggesting an element of renaissance planning.
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