Hafodunos

Hafodunos Hall

Hafodunos Hall
General information
Type Private House
Architectural style Venetian-inspired Gothic
Address Llangernyw, Wales
Coordinates 53°11′18″N 3°41′47″W / 53.1883°N 3.6964°W / 53.1883; -3.6964
Current tenants Vacant
Construction started 1861
Completed 1866
Destroyed partial damage 13 October 2004
Owner Private Owner
Technical details
Structural system Brick and Stone
Design and construction
Architect Sir George Gilbert Scott

Hafodunos Hall is a Gothic revival house located near the village of Llangernyw in Wales. Designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott, it was built between 1861 and 1866 for Henry Robertson Sandbach, replacing a house that had been built in 1674.

Architectural Design

Hafodunos is a Venetian-inspired Gothic style house, which has two storeys with an attic. The materials used to build the house are a soft red brick with a diaper, flushwork design and extensive stone dressings to windows and doors. The south east elevation known as the garden front is the most impressive side of the house, with the octagonal sculpture gallery to the north east, the entrance front tower also on the north east elevation and the conservatories and service quarters to the south west.

Interior

The Interior of the hall was as lavish as the exterior. The most notable features are a series of plaster bas-reliefs designed by John Gibson and Thorwaldsen, an international sculptor from Conwy who trained in Rome. He was a close friend of the Sandbach family. There are also five more Gibson marble reliefs from the house, and a Nymph statue by R J Wyatt, which are now at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool.[1]

The Sandbach Family

Hafodunos Hall was designed in a Gothic revival style by Sir George Gilbert Scott, and built between 1861 and 1866 for Henry Robertson Sandbach, whose family had bought the estate in 1830. The new house was built to replace a much older hall which had been built in 1674. The site had been occupied since at least 1530 but the remains of both previous houses are untraceable. The Sandbach family sold the house in the early 1930s but still farm part of the estate; most recently Antoinette Sandbach has entered public life as the MP for Eddisbury in Cheshire and still lives in what was once the estate foreman's house.[2]

George Gilbert Scott

Main article: George Gilbert Scott

Scott is well known for being one of the most important of the Gothic Revival architects of his time, especially for the Gothic style in domestic architecture. Hafodunos is the only example of his country house style in Wales and the second domestic structure that was built by Scott, the first being Kelham Hall in Nottinghamshire. One of his sons, John Oldrid Scott, who was also an architect, was later employed in 1883 to design the elaborate conservatories.

After the Sandbach family sold Hafodunos during the early 1930s, it has had different uses from being a private girls' school to an old people's home.

Girls School

The hall was requisitioned in the early 1940s by the Dinorben School for Girls (Wallington in London), allowing its pupils to escape the effects of World War II. The gymnasium/theatre and games pavilion were added to the grounds during the school years to extend the facilities. The school closed in 1969 and then became an accountancy college in the 1970s. It was subsequently owned by Caer Rhun Hall.[3][4]

Nursing Home

After the school shut down, Hafodunos Hall was converted into a residential home for the elderly. This saw the addition of a lift to the main corridor in the house. The residential home shut down in 1993 for failing to meet required standards and no suitable long term use was found.

Decline and Future

The building then fell victim to dry rot which had spread rapidly through the servant’s quarters into the main house. In 1998 Conwy Council were contemplating serving an Urgents Works Notice, however the owner had died leaving the estate in debt. Hafodunos was put on the market again and was eventually bought in 2001 by a developer from Colwyn Bay. During the late spring of 2004 he unveiled plans for hotel and Caravan Park.

The Fire

On the night of 13 October 2004, Hafodunos Hall was the subject of a devastating fire which gutted the main block of the house. The conservatories and service wing were saved from the fire and remained virtually untouched. Along with forty other historic sites in Wales, the property was featured on the ITV Wales television channel, and identified as at risk from vandalism, damage and neglect.[5] Two men from North Wales were sentenced for the arson attack and jailed for three years.[4][6]

Unwanted

After the fire Hafodunos and gardens fell into neglect. A book, entitled Hafodunos: Triumph of the Martyr was published by Mark Baker in 2005, detailing the history of the estate. Those remaining sculptures from the house were removed in 2005[1] and the property was put up for sale in April 2008 with a guide price of £500,000 – £750,000. At that time, the surviving features included a gate lodge (listed Grade II), a carriage drive, the ruins of the hall (listed Grade I), a keeper's cottage (listed Grade II), a games pavilion, a gymnasium/theatre, approximately 20 acres (8.1 ha) of fields, formal gardens (listed Grade II), woodland and a walled garden (listed Grade II).

Future

The property was eventually sold in January 2010 for £390,000, with the new owners expressing a desire to restore the hall for use as a single dwelling.[7]

As of November 2011 Linda Lamb and Mark Baker are working on a collection of songs based on the poems of Margaret Sandbach of Hafodunos which will be released as an album in 2012.[8] This will also be accompanied by a book based on Sandbach's life.

As of August 2014, considerable work has been carried out on the Grade II listed gardens to restore them to their former glory. In the last 5 years since the change of ownership, the main mansion has been cleared of rubble, and with the help of CADW, emergency works have been done to ensure no further damage occurs to the building caused by weather or time. Plans are in place to continue the restoration of the Grade I listed building to return it to its original design.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.