Returning from a day out with the family, Dez Thomas expected nothing more dramatic than unpacking the car. Instead he arrived back at the old chapel he’d just bought up in flames. Such was the damage he wouldn’t be able to return properly for 18 months.
“It didn’t feel great,” Dez, from the village of Llanrug in Gwynedd, said of the old chapel named Capel Mawr which he now credits with changing his life. “It was the springboard for everything that came afterwards.”
An ex-Royal Welsh Fusilier hailing from Cemaes Bay on Anglesey, Dez departed the Army in the late 1980s to pursue carpentry training in Wrexham. He embarked on a career fitting out shops and restaurants, which took him across the globe, from Austria to London and New York.
In 2004, whilst operating a garden decking business, he stumbled upon a listing for Capel Mawr. Capel Mawr – the “Great Chapel” – has stood at the heart of Llanrug since 1798, reshaped and rebuilt as the village grew on the back of slate and revivalist zeal. By 1867 it had been reborn in Romanesque style, a monument to faith and ambition.
Long after the hymns faded, it found new life as a television studio for Welsh-language broadcaster S4C, thanks to actor Dyfan Roberts who inserted a mezzanine for offices and dressing rooms while preserving much of its original fabric.
Dez ended up buying it 22 years ago for £80,000. “The price of a terraced house,” he reflected in conversation with North Wales Live. “It seemed too good an opportunity to pass up.”
When Dez acquired the property he found that it was scarcely liveable. “I slept on a mattress upstairs,” he recalled. “It was really quite bohemian.”
He eventually managed to get hold of a proper bed – but disaster struck with the fire. During his forced time away Dez resolved to use his expertise and restore the building himself. He started with the upper floor.
“When he converted the chapel to a TV studio, Dyfan Roberts had been careful to retain as much of the building’s original fabric as possible,” he said. “I was the same – I re-used wood panelling from the reception area to create the apartment.”
In 2007 Dez returned and began restoring the chapel’s vestry and school room. These spaces had once been gathering points for local residents attending film screenings.
Following completion in 2010 he began letting the upper apartment as holiday accommodation. But the chapel’s main space remained untouched and, with regional tourism flourishing, Dez made the bold decision to renovate this section too. Finance for the project came from selling the vestry.
He enlisted family support. His eldest son Jake, a joiner by trade, and youngest son Morgan joined the team. By 2019 a second holiday rental – Basement 19 – was welcoming guests. Visitors were captivated by the expansive space and premium finishes in the Manhattan-inspired loft flat.
“I’d worked on a property owned by the Lehman Brothers investment bank in Manhattan,” said Dez, 61. “I was inspired by that.”
During the post-Covid surge revenues rocketed to £117,000. They’ve since stabilised at £85,000 annually, maintaining a robust occupancy rate exceeding 75%.
Nevertheless, Dez has grown tired of the journey from Benllech on Anglesey, where he currently resides, to greet guests and manage cleaning and upkeep.
He’s also eager to embark on another substantial restoration scheme. “I’m looking to provide unique places for couples to stay,” he said. “Somewhere that offers glamping with yurts and shepherd huts. I’m also planning to convert an old helicopter into an Airbnb.
“I’m currently refitting a coffee shop in Four Mile Bridge on Anglesey. For the next project I’ll need funds so I’m reluctantly letting the chapel go.”
Twenty-one years after acquiring Capel Mawr he’s listed the property on the market for just under £1m. The estate agents are Williams and Goodwin The Property People.
They characterise Capel Mawr as a “truly unique opportunity”. The lower flat contains five bedrooms, whilst the upper one boasts four.
The layout is open-plan and, as one visitor observed, “photos don’t do justice to this absolutely stunning property”. The estate agents described the ground floor flat as offering an “almost cavernous open plan living space”.
They’ve identified various potential uses beyond maintaining the holiday rental business. Splitting the space into two separate dwellings is feasible, or purchasers could “create a home with an income”.
A second home is now also permitted following Cyngor Gwynedd’s unsuccessful appeal to maintain its Article 4 direction, which previously prevented change of use without planning permission.
A premium kitchen fitted with contemporary appliances sits adjacent to a dining space featuring a table that “easily seats 14 guests”.
The layout flows seamlessly into the sitting area designed for unwinding. Alongside a utility room the ground floor contains a bedroom with bunk beds and a contemporary shower room.
Four of the lower flat’s bedrooms are located on a galleried landing that overlooks the principal open-plan living area. Access is via an open-tread timber staircase. Each of these double bedrooms features fitted wardrobes and high-end en suites.
The upper flat follows a more conventional style. The agents noted: “This has been painstakingly restored and modernised to a style that enhances many of the original features with feature windows and impressively restored ceiling roses. A bespoke craftsman timber kitchen is second to none.”
The layout is also rather distinctive – reflecting Dez’s international travels. The apartment’s open space is circular in design and has been divided to create three separate zones for the kitchen, lounge and dining areas.
Various rooms branch off from the open-plan living space and spacious entertainment area. These comprise two double bedrooms and a dining space that’s cleverly concealed “almost at a mezzanine level”.
There’s also a principal bedroom which features a substantial dressing room that could serve as a fourth bedroom. Its bathroom is “full of Victorian elegance” and timber craftsmanship.
At the property’s front sits a generous gravelled parking and turning area with room for multiple vehicles. The wisteria-adorned front door creates an impressive entrance, with a lobby providing private access to both apartments.
“It’s been fantastic sharing the properties with visitors,” said Dez. “I’m very attached to the place and I’ll be sad to let it go.”
