Latitude: 52.9272 / 52°55'38"N
Longitude: -3.6366 / 3°38'11"W
OS Eastings: 290078
OS Northings: 337900
OS Grid: SH900379
Mapcode National: GBR 6B.MR3K
Mapcode Global: WH66Z.3PJ8
Plus Code: 9C4RW9G7+V8
Entry Name: Tal-y-Bont Chapel including forecourt walls and railings
Listing Date: 22 October 2001
Last Amended: 22 October 2001
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 25816
Building Class: Religious, Ritual and Funerary
ID on this website: 300025816
Location: On the corner of the road junction in the centre of the village.
County: Gwynedd
Town: Bala
Community: Llanycil
Community: Llanycil
Locality: Rhyd-Uchaf
Traditional County: Merionethshire
Tagged with: Chapel
Methodist chapel founded 1810 and rebuilt in its present form in 1870.
Medium-sized Victorian village chapel in eclectic Romanesque style. Snecked, rough-dressed slatestone facing with quoins and dressings of pale grey limestone ashlar. Medium-pitched slate roof with coped and kneelered gable parapets; surmounting decorative iron finial to the front gable and a squat brick boiler chimney to the rear. The facade is symmetical and comprises a single-storey porch projection to the centre with windows to either side and above. The porch is in the form of a lean-to, with a gabled and advanced central section. This has a segmentally-arched entrance with moulded arch and boarded door; surmounting coped, kneelered gable with iron finial as before. Above the entrance, within the gable, is a stone plaque with the inscribed dates 1870 and 1937. Flanking the entrance are single bays with dentilated eaves and small rectangular windows to the front and returns; these are of plain 2-pane sash type, with marginal glazing. To either side of the porch projection are tall round-arched windows with labels having carved, foliated stops; 10-pane C20 glazing with plain segmental head. Above the porch is a large central window of plate tracery type; overall round arch with label as before and, within, 3 round-arched lights supporting a rose. The sides are of 4 bays with plain dividing buttresses. Large round-arched windows with 9-pane C20 glazing and projecting sills.
Enclosing a forecourt in front of the chapel's facade are the contemporary low forecourt walls. These have chamfered limestone copings with surmounting spear-headed railings; corner piers with stopped-chamfered sides and gabled capping stones. Central gates with similar railings and flanking piers.
The interior was not inspected at the time of survey.
Listed as a mid-Victorian village chapel retaining good original character in a prominent road-side location.
Group value with the hall and manse adjacent.
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