Reg No
50920272
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural
Original Use
House
In Use As
Shop/retail outlet
Date
1760 - 1800
Coordinates
316150, 233133
Date Recorded
16/10/2015
Date Updated
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End-of-terrace two-bay four-storey over concealed basement former townhouse, built c. 1780, with full-height return to rear (west) elevation and recent timber shopfront to front (east) elevation. Now in use as retail outlet. M-profile pitched slate roof, front span hipped to north end, hidden behind brick parapet with granite coping, having rendered chimneystacks with clay pots to north elevation and replacement uPVC rainwater goods to north and rear( west) elevations. Hipped slate roof to return. Brown brick walls to upper floors laid in Flemish bond with rendered quoins over render cornice and rendered walls to front (east) elevation. Brown brick walls laid in English garden wall bond to north and rear (west) elevations. Square-headed window openings with masonry sills and rendered architraves, having six-over-six pane timber sliding sash windows to first and second floors and three-over-three pane timber sliding sash windows to third floor to front elevation. Blind square-headed openings with granite sills to north elevation. Square-headed window openings with masonry sills and raised rendered reveals and replacement casement windows to rear (west) elevation. Recent timber shopfront comprising square-headed door opening with double-leaf doors, flanked by square-headed display windows. Granite platform to front. Located on west side of Leeson Street Lower.
The plan form of this former townhouse attractively addresses its wedge-shaped plot, formed by the intersection of Leeson Street and Earlsfort Terrace. Though altered by the single-storey additions and render detailing, it nonetheless retains much of its restrained traditional character. Leeson Street forms part of an ancient routeway, Suesey Street, leading from the city towards Donnybrook. Located within the Fitzwilliam Estate, which covered much of the south-east of the city, the street was named for Joseph Leeson, 1st Earl of Milltown. Plots were leased for development in the mid-eighteenth century but apart from the north-western end it remained undeveloped until the 1780s. The street was largely completed by the early nineteenth century.