Reg No
50920028
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Previous Name
Mooney's
Original Use
Public house
In Use As
Public house
Date
1885 - 1900
Coordinates
315888, 233729
Date Recorded
22/09/2015
Date Updated
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Corner-sited attached five-bay three-storey with attic Gothic Revival public house, built 1886, with stair turret to south-west corner. Steeply pitched natural slate roof with roll-moulded clay ridge tiles and set behind red brick parapet with limestone coping. Decorative gabled dormer windows to south pitch with decorative bargeboards and finials. Single-profiled red brick chimneystack to east. Red brick walls laid in Flemish bond with splayed limestone ashlar plinth course, continuous flush limestone ashlar impost and lintel courses, and projecting moulded limestone ashlar eaves cornice to base of parapet supported on decorative corbels. Clasping circular stair turret rises from first floor to attic with corbelled out base having exposed limestone tread ends, forming curving base and supported on large corbels. Eaves cornice of south elevation extends across turret with circular attic storey surmounted by conical natural slate roof with lead finial. Deeply set square-headed window openings with bull-nose reveals, continuous moulded limestone sills and original bipartite timber casement windows with overlights. Shouldered window and door openings to ground floor formed in chamfered limestone ashlar surmounted by paired trefoil-headed overlights having leaded glazing, one-over-one timber sash windows and replacement glazed timber door. Occupying corner site at junction of Harry Street and Swan Yard.
A flamboyant polychromatic exercise of brick and stone by J. J. O’Callaghan in the Flemish Gothic typifying the High Victorian period. Retaining all external features and fabric intact, it also has a fine interior. Sited in an unassuming side street, it is a significant addition to the architectural heritage of the south city centre.