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1 and 2 Tai Cochion

Coordinates: 52°12′58″N 2°15′00″W / 52.2162°N 2.2501°W / 52.2162; -2.2501
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1 and 2 Tai Cochion consists of a pair of joined cottages in the village of Nannerch, Flintshire, Wales. Each of the cottages is designated by Cadw as a Grade II listed building.[1][2] They were built for the railway engineer William Barber Buddicom in 1877–88 and designed by the Chester architect John Douglas.[3]

The cottages are two-storey and are built with brick and tiled hipped roofs in the vernacular revival style typical of Douglas, with influences from the Old English style of Norman Shaw. Each is a mirror image of the other and they share a central chimney stack; the cottages are divided by a buttress on the ground floor. The windows are arranged asymmetrically and have moulded brick, mullions, and sill bands, as well as a string course between the floors. Each cottage has a five-light mullioned window positioned inward and a single-light window outward on the lower floor. The upper floor has a pair of 2-light windows on the inner side and a pair of 3-light windows on the outer side, both under a rendered gable decorated with a lozenge brickwork pattern. Both cottages have entrances on the side wall, with front-offset doorways featuring cambered heads and boarded doors with strap hinges, topped by small windows under the eaves. Toward the rear, each cottage has a single-light window on the lower floor, a two-light mullioned window on the upper floor, and an additional recessed window on the lower level. Both cottages have rear extensions added in the 20th century.[1][2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b 1 Tai Cochion, Cadw, retrieved 19 December 2016
  2. ^ a b 2 Tai Cochion, Cadw, retrieved 19 December 2016
  3. ^ Hubbard, Edward (1986). The Buildings of Wales: Clwyd. London: Penguin. p. 402. ISBN 0-14-071052-3.

52°12′58″N 2°15′00″W / 52.2162°N 2.2501°W / 52.2162; -2.2501