Plas Mynach

Plas Mynach is a large country house in Barmouth, Gwynedd, Wales. It is designated by Cadw as a Grade II* listed building, and stands in a prominent position overlooking the sea.[1]

Plas Mynach
Interior showing the staircase gallery on the left and the hall fireplace on the right
LocationBarmouth, Gwynedd, Wales
Coordinates52.7292°N 4.0627°W / 52.7292; -4.0627
Built1883
Built forW. H. Jones
ArchitectJohn Douglas
Architectural style(s)Welsh vernacular
Listed Building – Grade II*
Designated25 February 1992
Reference no.5244
Interior showing the staircase on the left and the hall on the right

History

The house was designed in 1883 by the Chester architect John Douglas for W. H. Jones.[2]

Architecture

Plas Mynach is built in local stone with a slate roof.[1] Its most distinctive features are a low spreading tower with a stair turret and stepped gables.[3] Its plan consists of a main range with two storeys to the south, single-storey service ranges to the north, and a gatehouse range to the east of the three-storey tower.[1] Internally "the hall, staircase and landing provide a classic example of Douglas's domestic joinery".[3] The door knocker came from Nuremberg.[3]

External features

The lodge to the house, also designed by Douglas for Jones, is designated at Grade II.[4]

Critique

In 1884 the architect Raffles Davison stated that the house "very nearly realised to me the idea of a perfect country house" and inside was "one of the most charming halls I have seen".[5] In his biography of Douglas, Hubbard states it has "a strength and austere simplicity unusual in Douglas's work".[3] The description in the listing refers to it as "one of the more important country houses by John Douglas, in an apparently little-altered condition".[1]

See also

References

Citations

  1. Cadw, "Plas Mynach (Grade II*) (5244)", National Historic Assets of Wales, retrieved 2 April 2019
  2. Hubbard 1991, p. 252
  3. Hubbard 1991, p. 109
  4. Cadw, "Plas Mynach Lodge (Grade II) (15498)", National Historic Assets of Wales, retrieved 2 April 2019
  5. Quoted in Hubbard 1991, p. 33

Sources

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