Penoyre House | |
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Penoyre House - under renovation in 2006 | |
General information | |
Type | Country house |
Architectural style | Italianate |
Town or city | Battle, Powys |
Country | Wales |
Coordinates | 51°58′08″N 3°25′51″W / 51.9689°N 3.4309°W / 51.9689; -3.4309 |
Construction started | 1846 |
Completed | 1848 |
Client | John Lloyd Vaughan Watkins |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Anthony Salvin |
Designations | Grade II* listed |
Penoyre House, Battle, Powys, Wales is a nineteenth century country house. Designed by Anthony Salvin for Colonel John Lloyd Vaughan Watkins, it was built between 1846-8. In an Italianate style, it is described by Mark Girouard as "Salvin's most ambitious classical house". The enormous cost of the house almost bankrupted the family and it was sold only 3 years after Colonel Watkins's death. From 1947, the house was in institutional use, and was converted to apartments in the early twenty-first century. The building is Grade II* listed The gardens are listed Grade II on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
History
John Lloyd Vaughan Watkins (1802–65) was a nineteenth century Welsh Liberal politician who sat Member of Parliament for Brecon. and was High Sheriff of Brecknockshire and Lord Lieutenant of Brecknockshire. Watkins inherited a late eighteenth century house from his father, the Reverend Thomas Watkins, and engaged Salvin to undertake a complete rebuilding from 1846-8. The cost of the house alone was over £33,000 and Allibone records that Watkins was obliged to "close (it) and live cheaply in a local hotel." Only three years after his death in 1865, the house was sold. Privately owned from 1868 to 1947, the house was then used as a school, the clubhouse to a golf club, a nursing home, an hotel and a rehabilitation centre. In the early twenty-first century, the house was converted to apartments.
Architecture
The house is designed in an Italianate style, echoing Sir Charles Barry's Trentham Park and Thomas Cubitt's Osbourne House. Girouard calls it "Salvin's most ambitious classical house". It has a three-storey main block, a "colossal" entrance tower with a belvedere top, and a balancing conservatory wing which had a glass-domed roof, although this was replaced in 1899.
Gallery
Notes
- ^ Girouard, p. 415.
- Good Stuff. "Penoyre House - Yscir - Powys - Wales". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
- Cadw. "Penoyre (PGW(Po)13(POW))". National Historic Assets of Wales. Retrieved 6 February 2023.
- Leigh Rayment Commons constituencies B Part 5
- "Editorial". Welshman. 6 October 1865. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- ^ Scourfield & Haslam, p. 426.
- Allibone, p. 92.
- Good Stuff. "Penoyre House - Yscir - Powys - Wales". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
- Good Stuff. "Penoyre House - Yscir - Powys - Wales". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
- "Savills | Penoyre Park, Cradoc, Brecon, LD3 9LP | Property for sale". Search.savills.com. 2012-01-06. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
- "Penoyre". Coflein. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
References
- Allibone, Jill (1988). Anthony Salvin: Pioneer of Gothic Revival Architecture. Lutterworth Press. ISBN 0-7188-2707-4.
- Girouard, Mark (1979). The Victorian Country House. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300034721.
- Scourfield, Robert; Haslam, Richard (2013). Powys: Montgomeryshire,Radnorshire and Breconshire. The Buildings of Wales. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300185089.