Survey Data

Reg No

50130289


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Artistic


Previous Name

Charleville Terrace


Original Use

House


In Use As

Apartment/flat (converted)


Date

1875 - 1885


Coordinates

314419, 235660


Date Recorded

08/06/2018


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Terraced two-bay two-storey two-pile house over raised basement, built c. 1880 as one of terrace of nine, having full-height return to rear (north) elevation. M-profile pitched slate roof, having hip to east end of rear pile, clay ridge tiles, red brick chimneystacks having clay pots to east and west ends and to return, profiled cast-iron gutter supported on bracketed yellow brick eaves course, and replacement uPVC downpipe to west end. Red brick walling to upper floors, laid in Flemish bond over granite plinth course and snecked limestone walls to basement; rendered to rear. Square-headed window openings with granite sills, having replacement aluminium windows to upper floors and red brick block-and-start quoins and replacement uPVC window to basement. Round-headed principal doorway with carved timber doorcase comprising panelled pilasters having scrolled brackets, supporting timber frieze and plain fanlight, and having timber panelled door; square-headed doorway to basement with red brick block-and-start quoins. Flight of ten nosed granite steps and granite platform shared with house to east, with wrought-iron handrail to west with cast-iron uprights, and mild steel to east. Garden to front bounded by decorative cast-iron railings on cut granite plinth, with cast-iron pedestrian gate having ornate piers.

Appraisal

This well-built house is part of a terrace of nine late nineteenth-century houses with similar parapet heights and fenestration patterns. The combination of snecked Calp limestone and red brick adds visual and textural interest to the facade. The corbelled brick detailing to the eaves places the house in a late nineteenth-century context. The North Circular Road was laid out in the 1780s to create a convenient approach to the city. It developed slowly over the following century, with little development west of Phibsborough till the 1870s. The terrace was named Charleville Terrace after Charleville House in Wicklow, home of Charles Monck, who was the landowner responsible for development along this stretch of the road.