Upper Tal-y-fan | |
Type: | House |
Map Relief: | yes |
Coordinates: | 51.774°N -2.7958°W |
Location: | Dingestow, Monmouthshire |
Built: | late Medieval |
Architecture: | vernacular |
Governing Body: | Privately owned |
Designation1: | Grade II* listed building |
Designation1 Offname: | Upper Tal-y-fan |
Designation1 Date: | 27 September 2001 |
Designation1 Number: | 25777 |
Upper Tal-y-fan, Dingestow, Monmouthshire is a farmhouse dating from the late-Medieval period. Subsequently, enlarged, it remains a private house and is a Grade II* listed building.
Sir Cyril Fox and Lord Raglan, in the first of their three-volume study Monmouthshire Houses. describe the architectural history of Tal-y-fan as "difficult to make out". They identified two cruck trusses of a medieval date, and suggested that "the transformation of this medieval building was a slow process". Cadw goes no further than describing the original building as "late-medieval". The architectural historian John Newman posits a date of the late 15th or early 16th centuries, identifying an internal doorhead of "identical" design to one of 1599 at Allt-y-Bela. The farmhouse was subsequently expanded and then fully renovated in the late 20th century. As at May 2021, the property was for sale.[1]
Fox and Raglan undertook a detailed study of the house, including gathering photographic evidence.[2] [3] John Newman describes the current arrangement as "zany-looking", with the earlier wings of the farmhouse "kinking obliquely" and linked by a later extension. These are constructed of whitewashed rubble. The interior is "remarkably intact". The house remains the privately owned farmhouse to a working farm and is a Grade II* listed building.
. John Newman (architectural historian). The Buildings of Wales. Gwent/Monmouthshire. 2000. Penguin. London. 0-14-071053-1.