Survey Data

Reg No

40815088


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural


Original Use

House


In Use As

House


Date

1890 - 1905


Coordinates

234490, 431930


Date Recorded

17/12/2012


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Semi-detached two-bay three-storey house with attic level, built c. 1900, having gable-fronted bay to the east end of the front elevation (north) with single-storey canted bay window at ground floor level. One of a pair with the building adjacent to the east (altered and not in survey). Pitched slate roofs having overhanging eaves to the front elevation (north) supported on moulded brackets, and with rendered chimneystacks to the east end. Battened timber panel to gable-fronted bay. Hipped roof to canted bay. Smooth rendered walls with smooth rendered stringcourse beneath brackets to eaves. Square-headed window openings, paired to eastern bay to front elevation (north) having painted sills and replacement fittings; round-headed window openings to gable-fronted bay at second floor level. Continuous sill course at first floor level. Shallow segmental-headed doorway to the west end of the main elevation (west) having replacement door, overlight and with flanking timber pilasters having consoles brackets over supporting moulded lintel. Set back from road in own grounds to the west of the centre of Buncrana. Small garden to front enclosed by rendered boundary walls having hooped wrought-iron railings over. Pedestrian gateway to the west end of boundary wall having cast-iron gate post, rendered gate pier (on square-plan) and hooped wrought-iron gate.

Appraisal

This substantial terraced house, of late nineteenth or very early twentieth-century date, retains its early form and character despite some modern alterations. The plain front elevation is enlivened by the gable-fronted bay with canted bay window at ground floor level, and by the overhanging eaves supported on moulded brackets. The battened timber panel to the gable- fronted bay adds additional interest to the front elevation. The irregular plan with canted bay window is a feature of many houses of its type and date in Ireland. The loss of the salient fabric to the window openings detracts somewhat from its appeal and integrity. This building forms a pair of related structures with the building adjoining to the east (altered and not in survey). It is very similar in form and appearance to a terrace of four three-storey buildings along Grianan Park a short distance to the south-east, which date to slightly later than this house on Church Street (not depicted on the Ordnance Survey twenty-five inch map of 1902). This building originally dates from the period when Buncrana was a popular seaside resort, frequented by the middle classes of Derry, particularly following the opening of the railway line to the town in 1864. Its forms part of an interesting group of substantial houses and villas built to the west and south-west of Buncrana during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century. This building is an integral element of the architectural heritage of Buncrana, and is an attractive feature in the streetscape to the west of the town centre. The attractive hooped wrought-iron railings, and the pedestrian gateway with hooped wrought-iron railings and cast-iron gate posts, add significantly to the setting and context, and complete this composition.