The search is on for Wales's Home of the Year 2022. The judges are led by Wales's favourite drumming weatherman Owain Wyn Evans. He joins interior designer Mandy Watkins from Anglesey, and Cardiff-based architect Glen Thomas to discover outstanding homes across Wales.
Our judges have reached mid Wales where they must choose between a castellated period property near Abergavenny, a Victorian manor house in Aberystwyth and a contemporary conversion in Cardigan. Scoring them on architectural merit, distinctive design and original style, which home will Owain, Mandy and Glen choose to go forward to the grand final?
In the north west, a dainty barn conversion outside Caernarfon is up against an imposing Victorian townhouse in Llandudno and an extended seaside lodge near Conwy.
The judges are in the south east where they must choose between a converted nursing home in Pontypridd, a 1930s semi-detached in Caerleon and a former borstal school outside Chepstow. Scoring them on architectural merit, distinctive design and original style, which home will Owain, Mandy and Glen choose to go forward to the grand final?
The judges are in the south west where they must choose between an Edwardian townhouse on the Mumbles, a converted watermill near Ammanford and a reimagined cottage in Kidwelly.
It's the Grand Final! Judges Owain Wyn Evans, interior designer Mandy Watkins and architectural designer Glen Thomas have criss-crossed the country in search of Wales' Home of the Year 2022. It's now down to the final five homes – the winners of each regional episode – to go head to head. But only one of them can be the winner of the prestigious title.
The judges have scoured the country in their search and now the five regional winners go head-to-head for the title of Wales’ Home of the Year.
In mid-Wales and the valleys, the judges choose between an extended 16th-century home in Llanddew, a quirky cottage in Powys and a post-Victorian detached quarry house in Pontypool.