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Latitude: 51.8929 / 51°53'34"N
Longitude: -3.7406 / 3°44'26"W
OS Eastings: 280316
OS Northings: 223026
OS Grid: SN803230
Mapcode National: GBR Y6.QYLX
Mapcode Global: VH5FJ.3PT8
Plus Code: 9C3RV7V5+5P
Entry Name: Valve House on former filter beds on Afon Sawdde below Llyn y Fan Fach Reservoir, including weirs
Listing Date: 16 February 2022
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 87841
ID on this website: 300087841
Location: In the north east corner of the Afon Sawdde filter beds, approximately 1 kilometre N of the reservoir dam, and reached by a private track 3 kilometres SE of Llanddeusant village.
County: Carmarthenshire
Community: Llanddeusant
Community: Llanddeusant
Locality: Llyn y Fan Fach
Traditional County: Carmarthenshire
Llyn y Fan Fach is a lake within a glacial ‘cwm’ that was converted to a reservoir by Llanelli Rural District Council to supply clean water to Llanelli via water works at Llannon. Llanelli had grown rapidly in the C19 through industrial development and was suffering appalling sanitary conditions. A number of sites were assessed in the late C19 / early C20 and Llyn y Fan Fach was identified as the most suitable for a water supply for the town. An Act of Parliament was required, and obtained in 1912.
Engineers were appointed and contractors put in place. Work on the site above Llanddeusant began in 1914, initially employing 175 Irish workmen who were accommodated in two wooden on-site barrack blocks at a camp near the site of what is now the Llyn y Fan Fach car park. By 1916, the project was encountering difficulties in retaining the original workforce in this challenging and isolated upland environment. Llanelli Rural District Council applied to the War Office and Home Office for labour from prisoners-of-war and interned aliens, which was refused.
The project was completed using conscientious objectors. Under The Military Service Act of 1916 all men between the ages of 18 and 41 were conscripted into military service, with some exemptions, including for those deemed by local tribunals to be conscientious objectors – men, who for ideological or religious reasons, refused to fight. In practice few men received an absolute exemption from military service and most applicants were forced into army regiments. The men who refused to sign army papers, or to wear the uniform when sent to barracks were imprisoned. In July 1916 the Home Office introduced schemes whereby these conscientious objectors could be released from prison to undertake civilian work, mostly hard manual labour at specified work camps.
The Home Office established 4 work camps in Wales: Llanddeusant; Llannon (also part of the Llanelli Rural District Water Works project and which closed in August 1917); Penderyn (Rhondda Cynon Taf), where a reservoir was constructed to supply water to Mountain Ash; and at Talgarth (Powys), where conscientious objectors were engaged in laying a water main for a new sanatorium.
Conscientious objectors started arriving at Llanddeusant in September 1916, mostly men from north-west England and the Midlands who had been incarcerated in Cardiff and Llanelli prisons. In all a substantial cohort of around 200 conscientious objectors was employed at various times at Llanddeusant, most of whom lived in the pre-existing barracks, supplemented by a hospital (all dismantled on the completion of the scheme, with the remains recorded by archaeological fieldwork in 2017). The men were engaged in construction of the dam and associated water works, with the skilled work undertaken by professional masons. Some 30 men based at Llanddeusant also worked on the reservoir and valve house at Llannon.
On the signing of the November 1918 Armistice, UK military demobilisation started in January 1919 and was largely complete by February 1922. Conscientious objectors were at first detained by the Home Office to give demobbed soldiers first opportunity to find regular work after the war, but most had been released by May 1919.
While the bulk of the hard manual labour was completed at Llanddeusant by 1918, it is likely that the programme of works was actually finished (in 1921) by newly demobbed civilians. The scheme operated until 1967, and it is now managed by Dŵr Cymru as a reserve water supply.
The works comprise an integrated system of water management with a variety of structures and engineering works to capture, hold and release water. To supplement natural sources of water flowing into the glacial lake, a leat channels flowing ground water from higher level from the dammed Afon Sychlwch. The western section of the leat where it reaches the dam is a stone-lined channel and flows into the lake at a point where the level is controlled by a separate header dam.
The height of water in the glacial lake was raised by 10 feet by the construction of a concrete dam. A stone building survives on the N face of the dam, formerly used for the operational management of the water works, other concrete bases for buildings of unknown use are located nearby.
Water level is controlled by a slipway on the main dam and an outfall c.75m to the N of the dam. Just below the outfall there is a valve house, a chambered stone structure designed to further control the flow of water downstream. It was made redundant when the water flow was fully piped. Further works are located downstream to control the water flow before it reaches the filter beds and valve house. At this point aggregates were filtered out of the water and the flow further regulated.
There are also other associated landscape features surviving that were created as part of the water management system, including: roads, stone and concrete revetments, spoil tips, workshop and store structures, concrete bases for buildings, weirs, tanks, stillage basins, bridges and culverts located from the dam downwards. These were identified by Dyfed Archaeological Trust during fieldwork in 2017 and are recorded on the Historic Environment Record.
Contemporary with the dam and filter beds. It was later extended to the N, blocking a window.
The Valve House stands on a high battered base of rock-faced stone, but is otherwise of quarried stone with rock-faced quoins, under a hipped slate roof on swept eaves that gives the building its distinct profile. The main access is a doorway in the E wall under a concrete lintel. In the north wall is a single-light window and in the W wall a mullioned 2-light window with concrete dressings. A (later) outshut, with corrugated asbestos-cement roof, is on the N side. It has a doorway at basement level on the W side facing the dam, below a 2-light wood-framed window, both under concrete lintels, and a further boarded-up doorway in the N wall and there are further stone and blockwork additions on the N and E sides of the outshut.
Listed for special architectural interest as part of a significant civic engineering scheme to supply water to Llanelli and which has survived intact; and special historical interest for its employment of conscientious objectors during World War One on nationally-important, but not war-related, work; and for group value with the associated reservoir dam, filter beds and bridge over Nant Melyn.
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