Island House Restoration Ltd

Island House Laugharne was purchased by Island House Restoration Ltd in March 2020 and is a 16th century Grade 11* listed house was last occupied sixteen years ago and is now seriously dilapidated. The house has been purchased by a company, Island House Restoration Ltd whose objectives are to restore the house to its original condition and convert it into a hotel, bar and restaurant. The house is located on Wogan St close to Laugharne Castle.

The company Architects are making planning applications and discussing the project with Carmarthen County Council and Cadw, the Welsh Government Historic Buildings Dept.

Latest Update – 22 November 2022

This website is updated regularly, the latest update is to the before and after section of this website showing survey images taken between December 2020/January 2021 and July 2021.

Click on the link below to view the updates:

Island House Restoration Ltd Exhibition

Island House Restoration Ltd ExhibitionIsland House Restoration Ltd hosted an exhibition in December 2021 / January 2022 showcasing the work that has been carried out on Island House from purchase to the present day. It Included the proposals for the future development of Island House into a boutique hotel, bar and restaurant.

The exhibition was open to everyone and was held at Globe House opposite the Town Hall.

The help of many consultants, researchers and the time, dedication and private funding by brothers Philip Bond & Stephen Kirkwood made it possible for Island House Restoration Ltd to host this extensive and informative exhibition for the people of Laugharne and its wider communities.

Location

An extract of Mary Curtis’s text published in the book The Antiquities of Laugharne second edition published in 1880.

A sketch of Island House from the rear of the garden by Mary Curtis (1856)

“Island House, a most ancient and interesting one, is near the castle ; its walls in some parts as thick as those of the castle. The projecting part of it is properly the middle of the house ; the other half, extending on the other side of it, was destroyed by accident by the cannon-balls fired on the castle by Cromwell’s soldiers. At that time a partisan of his was living in the house; and a small part of the half now extending out from the other side of the projecting part, was destroyed; one of the balls was preserved in the house up to 1823. It extended farther out at the back ; for on the outside wall, on the castle side, are two protuberances showing there had been a room ; besides, foundations proving a building went farther out. In the garden the foundation of a rounded tower was discovered underground in 1818; also Roman baths and leaden pipes ; an Etruscan urn was found in the Roman remains. About 150 years ago a small cottage was at the bottom of the garden not far from the wall by the Strand ; there were steps from it to the sea ; the wall at bottom of the garden did not go so far out as now. At the front of the house an old door opening into a yard bears the date 1658. There were two bridges belonging to Island House till 1800, when, through the neglect of a guardian to the then minor — the heir to the property — their possession was lost. One bridge was on the Strand, and taken away a few years ago ; the other remains close to the house. Formerly there was no thoroughfare before the house ; the public road went by that row of houses opposite the turning to Stoneway, and probably passed hence round the back of the mill which is on the Grist. This house appears in the sketch of the castle, dated 1740, and to the right of it.”

LATEST NEWS

The Owners And People Of Island House | 1778 – 2020
LiDAR Image Of Trench 2
Rob Scourfield
James Vincent IHRL
Emergency Repairs
New oak beams installed
Archaeological Survey
The Arrival Of The First Delivery Of Oak Beams

Consultants, Advisors & Reports

Architects -Davies Sutton , Cardiff

Structural Engineers – Mann Williams, Cardiff

Business Advisors – Landsker- Whitland , Carmarthenshire

Building Historian – Rob Scourfield – Cresswell Quay, Pembrokeshire

Historian and Archivist – David Llewellyn – Templeton, Pembrokeshire

Archeologists- Dyfed Archeological Trust,  Llandeilo , Carmarthenshire

Dendrochronologists – Tree Ring Services, Mitcheldean , Gloustershire

Arboriculture Consultants – David Rice Forestry

Architectural Geologist – Dr Tim Palmer , Aberystwyth University

Ecologists – Wild Wood Ecology , Caerphilly, Glamorganshire

Contact us

Get in touch

This contact form is deactivated because you refused to accept Google reCaptcha service which is necessary to validate any messages sent by the form.
© Copyright - Island House Restoration Ltd - Company Number: 12452655