Latitude: 53.2624 / 53°15'44"N
Longitude: -4.0938 / 4°5'37"W
OS Eastings: 260441
OS Northings: 375982
OS Grid: SH604759
Mapcode National: GBR JN82.FHY
Mapcode Global: WH542.28V9
Plus Code: 9C5Q7W64+XF
Entry Name: Liverpool Arms Hotel
Listing Date: 23 September 1950
Last Amended: 13 July 2005
Grade: II*
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 5612
Building Class: Commercial
Also known as: The Liverpool Arms Hotel, Beaumaris
ID on this website: 300005612
Location: Fronting the street in the block of buildings near the W end of Castle Street between Gadlys Lane and Steeple Lane.
County: Isle of Anglesey
Town: Beaumaris
Community: Beaumaris (Biwmares)
Community: Beaumaris
Built-Up Area: Beaumaris
Traditional County: Anglesey
Tagged with: Hotel
A house of c1700, evidence for which is the staircase at the rear. The original building was enlarged and converted to a hotel in the late C18 or early C19, and it is shown as the Liverpool Arms on the 1829 town plan. In 1937 it had a portico and balcony on pairs of turned wooden posts, with balustrade, which has since been replaced. Otherwise the building escaped Victorian remodelling.
A 3-storey 7-bay hotel of scribed roughcast, slate roof, and roughcast stacks to the R and to the L of centre in the front roof slope. The central entrance has an open modern porch on square posts, and steps up to a recessed replacement door. The lower and middle storeys have moulded architraves to 18-pane hornless sash windows, with broad and smooth-rendered sill band in the middle storey. Between middle and upper storeys is a raised band with 'Liverpool Arms Hotel' in big raised letters. The upper storey has shorter 6-pane hornless sash windows, of which the 2nd bay is blind and the 4th has horned sashes.
The rear has extensive additions, above which are 2 rendered gabled bays, and some 4-pane and 2-pane sashes, including the stair windows on the R side.
The interior is modernised, although ground-floor rooms on the L side of the entrance retain panelled shutters. On the L side, at the rear, is an original full-height dog-leg stair with turned balusters, plain square newels and panelled sides.
Listed grade II* for its special architectural interest as a fine Georgian hotel with significant earlier origin and with an especially well-preserved front, and for its contribution to the historical integrity of Castle Street.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
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