Croft-Y-Bwla

About Croft-Y-Bwla

'' is a country house and farm north-west of Monmouth, south-east Wales. The house was built around 1830 and was designed by the noted Monmouth architect George Vaughan Maddox. It has been listed as Grade II since 1974. Part of the estate is being developed for housing, under the name Parc Glyndwr. During archaeological investigations in advance of development, excavations revealed the remains of a Neolithic crannog built on a man-made island away from the shore of a now-vanished lake, as well as evidence of a Bronze Age boatbuilding community on the site. EtymologyThe house name means "bull's croft". "'" is a Welsh word borrowed from the English "bull" and it appears in written form for the first time in 1253: '. The native and older word for bull in Welsh is "'", which is much more common. "'" also appears in placenames in Mid-Wales e. g. Carreg-y-Bwla, a working farm between Llangurig and Rhayader. History and architectureCroft-Y-Bwla was built in about 1830 for Thomas Dyke, a Monmouth grocer, and was designed by G. V. Maddox. It is sited on a low spur of land with a distant view of the town. The two-storey house is of classical design, square in plan with three bays on each side. The walls are smoothly rendered. The entrance porch is of greenish stone from the Forest of Dean, with a pair of Doric columns. On the south-east side there is a verandah, described in 2000 as "exquisite" but "much decayed". The house also has stables dating from the mid-19th century, and a single-storey roadside lodge also believed to have been designed by Maddox. The estate includes a garden lodge, carriage drive, parkland, greenhouse and conservatory.

Croft-Y-Bwla Description

'' is a country house and farm north-west of Monmouth, south-east Wales. The house was built around 1830 and was designed by the noted Monmouth architect George Vaughan Maddox. It has been listed as Grade II since 1974. Part of the estate is being developed for housing, under the name Parc Glyndwr. During archaeological investigations in advance of development, excavations revealed the remains of a Neolithic crannog built on a man-made island away from the shore of a now-vanished lake, as well as evidence of a Bronze Age boatbuilding community on the site. EtymologyThe house name means "bull's croft". "'" is a Welsh word borrowed from the English "bull" and it appears in written form for the first time in 1253: '. The native and older word for bull in Welsh is "'", which is much more common. "'" also appears in placenames in Mid-Wales e. g. Carreg-y-Bwla, a working farm between Llangurig and Rhayader. History and architectureCroft-Y-Bwla was built in about 1830 for Thomas Dyke, a Monmouth grocer, and was designed by G. V. Maddox. It is sited on a low spur of land with a distant view of the town. The two-storey house is of classical design, square in plan with three bays on each side. The walls are smoothly rendered. The entrance porch is of greenish stone from the Forest of Dean, with a pair of Doric columns. On the south-east side there is a verandah, described in 2000 as "exquisite" but "much decayed". The house also has stables dating from the mid-19th century, and a single-storey roadside lodge also believed to have been designed by Maddox. The estate includes a garden lodge, carriage drive, parkland, greenhouse and conservatory.