Near
Criccieth in Gwynedd are the ruins of
Plas Gwynfryn, a 19th-century "stone mansion with castellated towers and turrets and stone-mullioned windows"
mansion built by Hugh Ellis-Nanney. He had demolished his existing manor house (c. 16th century) and rebuilt a new family residence c. 1870s. The location of
Gwynfryn is on the
Llŷn Peninsula overlooking Wales' highest mountain range,
Snowdonia (Eryri) with views of
Cadair Idris, and also to the south,
Cardigan Bay. The land was a 12,072-acre estate in 1873, and the annual rental income was £5,814. The mansion was featured in the June edition of
The Builder magazine in 1877. The former residence became a hospital during the
World War, then later used as an orphanage, and finally sold to become a hotel. The mansion was devastated by a fire in 1982 and again in 2014. As of 2011, the former house was classified by
Save Britain's Heritage who said it is at risk of being lost. The former Grade II castellated mansion was put up for sale in 2019 with an asking price of £500,000. However, it would take £1.5m to restore. Although a ruin it still has original features such as its porte-cochere, and stone mullioned and transom windows. As of 2020, a property group has explored renovating the derelict mansion into 25-30 apartments. Since February 2021, a professional member of
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors working in coordination with the Welsh Government,
Cadw and
Coflein made a proposition for a renovation and conversion to turn Plas Gwynfryn into apartments, similar to
Blencowe Hall in Cumbria, which also features a collapsed tower, now with an inserted glazed structure. The name 'Plas Gwynfryn' was taken from the Welsh language, an ancient
Celtic language of the
Welsh people. 'Gwynfryn' is also a Welsh boy's name which translates as 'White Hill', or 'happy hill', while 'Plas' translates as 'Mansion'. ==Criccieth - the Promenade==