Reg No
50030358
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Original Use
House
In Use As
House
Date
1845 - 1850
Coordinates
319067, 236014
Date Recorded
16/02/2015
Date Updated
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Terraced two-bay two-storey house over raised basement, built 1847, having two-storey return to rear and two-bay single-storey outbuilding to rear with half dormer attics. Pitched M-profile natural slate roof with parapet to front elevation having cut granite platband and cornice, smooth rendered chimneystacks with cornice and clay chimneypots, and cast-iron rainwater goods. Brown brick laid in Flemish bond to front elevation having cut granite stringcourse over smooth rendered wall to basement level. Smooth rendered walls to gable. Square-headed window openings with cut granite sills and six-over-six pane timber sliding sash windows to upper floors and eight-over-eight pane timber sliding sash windows to basement level. Round-headed door opening having petal motif fanlight, door surround with cornice and frieze supported by console brackets and timber panelled door. Cut granite entrance steps and platform having cast-iron balustrade. Set back from road and having cast-iron railings on cut granite plinth wall, and cast-iron pedestrian gate. Situated off Clontarf Road facing shared enclosed green. Associated former gate lodge to west. Outbuildings to rear having pitched natural slate roofs, roughcast rendered and rubble stone walls and recent single-storey extensions. Recent two-storey house to rear.
This house is part of a substantial terrace that retains its early form and character. Historic fabric remains to the entrance platforms, door surrounds and railings. Together with its outbuildings, the gate lodge and the shared green, this house and its grouping forms a largely intact example of large-scale mid-nineteenth-century housing development. The terrace was built in 1847 by Isaac Warren, a steward of the Vernon estate, on ground obtained from that estate. The raised entrance provides views of the seafront, a characteristic that became desirable in the mid-nineteenth century, while the shared green gives privacy from the thoroughfare of Clontarf Road. The beginnings of a door opening arch at the east side of No. 90, coupled with the asymmetry of the terraced grouping suggest that further houses had been planned. The seafront developed in irregular terracing and was designated Clontarf Road in 1912.