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Latitude: 52.9913 / 52°59'28"N
Longitude: -2.8649 / 2°51'53"W
OS Eastings: 342038
OS Northings: 344127
OS Grid: SJ420441
Mapcode National: GBR 7C.HDLM
Mapcode Global: WH89D.Y2XL
Plus Code: 9C4VX4RP+G2
Entry Name: South Stable Block at Emral Hall
Listing Date: 7 May 1998
Last Amended: 7 May 1998
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 19773
Building Class: Domestic
ID on this website: 300019773
Location: One of the two former stable blocks to Emral Hall which now form part of the Emral Stud and are reached by a private drive from Emral Hall Lodge. It is sited between the bridge over Emral Brook and t
County: Wrexham
Town: Wrexham
Community: Willington Worthenbury
Community: Willington Worthenbury
Locality: Emral
Traditional County: Flintshire
Tagged with: Stable
Constructed 1730-35 as one of two stable blocks for Emral Hall (1724-27) to which they gave an architectural setting in forming an axial route and courtyard. Designed by Richard Trubshaw and Joseph Evans who had designed the Hall, and who, in 1736 began work on St Deniol's Church, Worthenbury. The stable was sold as part of the estate in the 1930's. Emral Hall was on an ancient moated site of which Emral Brook formed the eastern side, the house was demolished in 1936. The former entrance gates have been relocated to Eccleston Parish Church.
Rectangular two-storey former stable block to south of the main axial approach to Emral Hall. Set back from an inclined plane with brick retaining wall under stone coping leading from the site of the former gates. Red brick with stone dressings including band course and rusticated quoins, hipped roof. Advanced central gabled bay has entrance with lugged stone architrave and entablature under a segmental pediment; midway along the elevation to either side are symmetrically placed doors each with a lugged stone architrave and entablature. The gables have two circular windows, or possible former pitching holes, flanking a clock. A stone band delineates the ground from the first floor and rests on top of the stone keystones of the ground floor windows. Windows have been replaced.
Most fixtures and fittings have been removed though the original beams survive throughout.
Listed as an architect designed stable-block of the early C18, for its historic association with Emral Hall, and for group value with the North Stable Block.
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