Survey Data

Reg No

41310066


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Artistic, Social


Previous Name

Essex Castle


Original Use

Convent/nunnery


In Use As

Convent/nunnery


Date

1885 - 1895


Coordinates

284160, 303477


Date Recorded

27/07/2012


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Detached eleven-bay three-storey convent with basement, built 1888, having four-storey tower to mid-facade, external face flush with rest of main facade, with flat-roofed porch to front, and with canted gable ends. Second pile to rear of south half, and two five-bay three-storey return blocks to rear, southern having projecting gable-fronted bay with bellcote. Various later school buildings to rear and to south. Slate roofs, hipped to front block and pitched to rear, with rendered chimneystacks to rear wall and to returns, and having box-profile cast-iron rainwater goods supported on widely spaced corbels. Roughcast rendered walls to main block, pebbledashed to northern return and exposed snecked squared sandstone to southern return with red brick eaves supports and red brick block-and-start quoins, atop tooled limestone walling to ground floor level. Square-headed windows to main block with moulded limestone surrounds and limestone sills, with chamfered cut-stone surrounds to tower, shouldered headed windows with red brick surrounds to southern return, with replacement uPVC windows throughout. Triple triangular-headed louvers to top of gable-front to south return. Statue of Our Lady to upper part of tower, atop moulded corbel and with sculpted hood with finial. Dressed limestone crenellations to tower. Porch has roughcast rendered walls, moulded string course, cut-stone crenellations and carved cross finial. Elliptical-headed doorway to porch having moulded limestone surround and double-leaf timber panelled door with paned overlight. Gable-fronted bay to southern return has statue supported on carved corbels and with similar hood to front elevation statue. Stone steps accesses south end of terrace in front of building, with crenellated boundary wall. Rendered boundary wall to road with dressed limestone crenellations. Gateway to north end of boundary.

Appraisal

The Saint Louis Convent complex at Carrickmacross is a group of buildings of apparent architectural merit and visual interest. The long and high facade with canted ends of the main building adds interest to the streetscape, the crenellated tower providing an eye-catcher. The statues, and the red brick detailing to the sandstone walls of one of the rear returns adds textural contrast. The complex is of strong social historical interest as a key educational institution in the town for over a century.