Survey Data

Reg No

50081074


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural


Original Use

House


In Use As

House


Date

1790 - 1830


Coordinates

314791, 232378


Date Recorded

02/12/2013


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Terraced double-pile two-bay two-storey over basement house, built c.1810, having return with catslide roof to rear (south) elevation. M-profile pitched artificial slate roof having red brick chimneystacks, clay pots, and parapet to front (north) elevation with granite coping. Brown brick walls laid in Flemish bond having string course over rendered walls to basement. Yellow brick walls to rear elevation, laid in English garden wall bond. Square-headed window openings with one-over-one pane timber sash windows and cut granite sills. Round-headed door opening with timber panelled door, carved timber doorcase and plain fanlight. Flagged path. Recent railings to basement area. Garden to front having rendered piers with granite caps to either end of front boundary, with setts to garden threshold.

Appraisal

Addressing Dublin’s Grand Canal, this house forms part of a terrace which was built shortly after the completion of the circular line of the canal in 1797. The terrace was built on lands belonging to the Earl of Meath, beside the river Poddle and the Greenmount Spinning Manufactory which was built in 1808. This land had been the site of a corn mill since the mid-eighteenth century. The houses along the terrace exhibit a well-designed and well-executed early suburban architecture. This house brings variety to the terrace, with an interesting irregular fenestration pattern which differs from its more formal neighbours. Together they make a positive architectural contribution to the street and to the setting of the Grand Canal.