The village lies in a valley on the A44 road on the edge of the Radnor Forest, and is home to a church and two pubs. The A481 road from Builth joins the A44 near here.
Buildings
St Michael's Church
St Michael's Church is medieval in origin, but was totally rebuilt in 1846 in Norman revival style by Thomas Nicholson of Hereford. The design is said to have been based on Kilpeck Church in Herefordshire.[1]
Crug Eryr Castle
Above the village, and adjacent to the A44, can be found Crug Eryr Castle, a motte-and-bailey structure noted for its association with the visit in 1188 of the Archbishop of Canterbury and Gerald of Wales.
^Haslam, Richard (1979). The Buildings of Wales – Powys : (Montgomeryshire, Radnorshire, Breconshire). Harmondsworth: Penguin. pp. 252–253. ISBN0140710515.