Gnoll Country Park Masterplan | Neath
The regeneration of the grade II* registered historic park and garden at Gnoll Estate Country Park.
Gnoll Country Park Masterplan | Neath
The regeneration of the grade II* registered historic park and garden at Gnoll Estate Country Park.
Gnoll Estate Country Park is an ambitious £12m heritage restoration project in collaboration with Neath Port Talbot County Council.
Aimed at delivering a diverse range of environmental, heritage and tourism interventions, the scheme improves visitor facilities, restores historic features, and repurposes underused areas throughout the parkland. Concurrently forming a key link to the wider Vale of Neath Heritage Corridor, the project includes:
- The replacement of the existing visitor centre with a more sensitive building that contextually responds to its site
- The restoration of Pond Cottage as a high quality, self-catering lodge
- Consolidation, repair and enhancement works to the Gnoll House ruins
- The repair and restoration of the kitchen garden as the setting for new visitor accommodation
- The integration of interpretation across the site; detailing the history of the park and its cultural and historical importance to the area
- Extensions to recreation and walking routes including a new bridge linking the park to 57 hectares of Woodland Trust land
- Wider improvements to landscaping and parking.
Evolved from the 18th century landscaped grounds of the former Gnoll House, and subsequently developed as a Victorian Park, Gnoll Estate Country Park forms a focal recreational space for the surrounding community. Its elevated position offers spectacular views over the town and across the county borough. Way marked trails traverse its woodland, grasslands, marshes and reservoirs. Throughout the parkland, many fragments of history tell the evolution of Neath, importantly including the ruins of Gnoll House. However, activity has more recently been centralised around a visitor centre constructed in the 1990’s, together with the many accessible children’s play parks located around the main fishing pond. Areas on the periphery of this were consequently underutilised, with the historic associations of the park to the town consequently not being fully realised.
Further to the invitation for local authorities across Wales to develop grant application proposals to Welsh Government for Levelling-Up Funding, Neath Port Talbot Council appointed Hiraeth Architects to lead a multi-disciplinary team of consultants in the successful development of design proposals for the restoration and enhancement of Gnoll Estate Country Park. The strategy places a new focus onto the heritage elements of the park through several interlinked projects: repair and interpretation works to Gnoll House ruins that provide a new forum for outdoor events; the restoration and evolution of the historic Kitchen Gardens to provide overnight accommodation; and the repurposing of Pond Cottage as a holiday let. This recognises the importance of heritage and identity being at the heart of its community. Allied with this, the redevelopment of the visitor centre provides modern community facilities including a café with south facing views across the Fish Pond; event, meeting and conference facilities; and a dedicated children’s soft play space.
Find out more about each of our interlinked projects at Gnoll Park
Following the initial successful Levelling Up Fund bid which attracted circa £20m worth of funding across two projects within the Vale of Neath Heritage Corridor, the Gnoll Park project was subsequently tendered as a design and build contract, with Andrew Scott Ltd being the successful tenderer. The project is currently on site, and we are working with the Andrew Scott team to deliver this suite of projects within the ambitious 12-month delivery period, whilst maintaining the general daily use of the park for visitors and the community.