Reg No
50070512
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Original Use
House
Historical Use
Shop/retail outlet
In Use As
House
Date
1835 - 1860
Coordinates
314359, 234898
Date Recorded
14/11/2012
Date Updated
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Terrace of five two-bay two-storey houses, built c.1840-1855. Shopfront to front (west) elevation of No.17. M-profile pitched slate roofs, hipped to rear to north to No.14 and to south to No.15, terracotta ridge tiles, brown brick chimneystacks and clay chimneypots, cast-iron rainwater goods, raised brown brick parapets having granite coping. Brown brick, laid in Flemish bond, to walls, carved granite plinth course. Square-headed window openings, brick voussoirs, raised render reveals, painted masonry sills, one-over-one pane timber sash windows to No.13 and No.16, uPVC windows to others. Round-arched door openings to front of No.13, No.14, and No.15, with brick voussoirs, masonry surrounds, panelled pilasters having scrolled consoles supporting cornices, timber panelled doors and granite steps. Spoked fanlight and cast-iron bootscrape to No.15. Elliptical-arched openings to No.16 and No.17, brick voussoirs, moulded masonry surrounds, panelled pilasters and scrolled consoles supporting cornices and petal fanlights, timber panelled doors. Half-glazed door to No.16. Wrought-iron railings on painted granite plinth walls surrounding gardens to front of houses, matching pedestrian gates.
This terrace of similarly-composed houses is enhanced by a shared parapet height and fenestration pattern, creating a regularity of design and proportion, in keeping with the other terraces on the streetscape. Some timber sash windows are retained, which contributes to the patina of age, and the terrace is enlivened by well-composed doorcases, with attractive pilasters and fanlights. No.13, No.14 and No.15 appear in Pettigrew and Oulton's Dublin Directory of 1846, and it appears the two houses to the north are slightly later, with all five houses listed by 1855. Thom’s Directory of 1850 list these buildings as being in domestic use at the time, with a weighmaster of Smithfield, William Addi, at No.14, and an iron founder, Mr William Vincent, at No.16, and No. 17 not yet built.