Photography: courtesy of Inigo

Tŷ Llwyd is a 17th-century Grade II-listed farmhouse on the south-western edge of the Bannau Brycheiniog National Park in Carmarthenshire, Wales. Built in the early 1600s, it is surrounded by 25 acres of pasture, woodland and landscaped gardens.

The stone house has been carefully reworked under its current ownership into a series of interconnected living spaces spread across three former agricultural buildings. Original Welsh oak beams, lime-plastered walls, inglenook fireplaces and exposed stonework remain throughout, alongside later additions in oak, slate and glass.

At the centre of the plan is a double-height living room lined with flagstones and exposed trusses, with glazing opening onto the surrounding grounds. A curved timber-framed window fitted within a former cart opening brings light deep into the room, while a wood-burning stove anchors one end of the space. Nearby, the kitchen pairs painted cabinetry and timber worktops with a Rangemaster set inside the original fireplace.

Five bedrooms are divided across two staircases, including a ground-floor guest suite with direct garden access. Elsewhere, a glazed linkway added by the current owners connects the older structures and looks onto the gardens.

The grounds include wildflower meadows, paddocks and newly built stables, along with a large metal-clad outbuilding wired for future solar installation. The house sits close to the market towns of Ammanford and Llandeilo, with the mountains, waterfalls and walking trails of the Brecon Beacons immediately to the north.

It’s listed for £995,000 with Inigo.

Photography: courtesy of Inigo
Photography: courtesy of Inigo

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