Cyfiau Bach - Devil's Bridge

About
Location
Inside
Outside
Out & About
Contact Us

Please contact us via:

Telephone: +44 (0)1494 563228
Email:
Skype: click here to send a message

To see booking availabilty and pricing please visit our listing on cottageguide by clicking the links below:

Cyfiach Bach on cottageguide.co.uk
Booking availability

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In addition to the many activities in the immediate area there are plenty of attractions nearby. Here are links to a few of our favourites (links open in a new window):



Aberystwyth Arts Centre
Bwlch Nant yr Arian Forest Visitor Centre
Aberaeron (Georgian coastal town)
Centre for Alternative Technology
King Arthur's Labyrinth

Outside there is seating for dining on the terraced front garden and a large decked area to the rear of the property, from where you can appreciate the stunning view to the mountains. There is also a barbecue stand and ample parking on site.


Converted to a modern, contemporary style, the barn sleeps six, in three bedrooms (one en suite). The kitchen is fully equipped, with oven, ceramic hob, dishwasher, microwave, refrigerator and freezer. There is also a washer-dryer. Tiled areas have underfloor heating, and the main living-room has a wood-burning stove. Freesat TV is available on a 32" LCD HD screen, with a wide selection of DVDs, books, OS maps and games.


Cyfiau Bach is a few minutes' walk from Devil's Bridge (Pontarfynach) in Ceredigion, a three-hour drive from Cardiff or Birmingham. (Click here to open the full map in a new window.)

Half an hour from Aberystwyth, the barn's location allows you to explore both coastal and mountain areas. Devil's Bridge itself is home to the famous Three Bridges waterfalls, and the Rheidol Valley narrow gauge steam railway. Click the links below for more:

Devil's Bridge Waterfalls

Rheidol Railway

Hafod Estate (local forest walks)

Cyfiau Bach is a luxury converted barn in Devil's Bridge (Pontarfynach), Wales, available for self-catering holiday rental.    

Reputed to date from c.1780 and probably forming part of the nearby smallholding, it had fallen into disuse and was sold by a local farmer in 2002 and purchased by us in its still semi-derelict state in the summer of 2003. The interiors were designed from scratch and built over the next two years.

Many visitors return year after year, and we hope you will find the barn as welcoming as they do. Please follow the navigation to the left for more...