Survey Data

Reg No

22501442


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Social


Original Use

School


In Use As

School


Date

1895 - 1900


Coordinates

260528, 112275


Date Recorded

30/06/2003


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Attached thirteen-bay two-storey over basement national school, dated 1897, originally detached on a shallow H-shaped plan retaining original fenestration with two-bay two-storey gabled advanced end bays having single-bay two-storey flat-roofed lower infill bays. Extended, c.1950, comprising single-bay single-storey flat-roofed projecting porch to centre with three-bay single-storey flat-roofed lower flanking bays. Pitched slate roofs on a H-shaped plan with red clay ridge tiles, yellow brick Running bond chimney stacks, timber bargeboards, and cast-iron rainwater goods on timber eaves. Flat bitumen felt roofs to infill bays and to additional ranges with timber eaves and cross finial to porch. Unpainted roughcast walls with cut-stone date stones/plaques. Painted rendered walls to porch with rendered strips. Square- and shallow segmental-headed window openings with stone sills (forming sill course to first floor). 2/2 timber sash windows. Paired square-headed openings to gables with stone sills, and louvered timber fittings. Square-headed window openings to additional ranges with concrete sills and timber casement windows. Round-headed door openings to infill bays with rendered concave surrounds, tongue-and-groove timber panelled doors, and overlights. Square-headed door opening to porch in rendered recess with timber panelled double doors, sidelights and overlights. Set back from road in grounds shared with Saint Stephen’s Monastery.

Appraisal

This school is an attractive and imposing, substantial building of balanced proportions and symmetrical plan that has been well maintained to present an early aspect, incorporating important early surviving salient features and materials. The additional range forming an entrance bay has now become part of the historic fabric of the building and is of architectural merit in its own right. The school is of additional significance in the locality as evidence of the continued development of educational centres in Waterford City by church bodies, such as the De La Salle order, at the turn of the twentieth century.