Survey Data

Reg No

50930111


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Artistic


Original Use

House


In Use As

Office


Date

1815 - 1825


Coordinates

316614, 233088


Date Recorded

25/09/2015


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Attached two-bay four-storey over basement former townhouse, built c. 1820, with two-stage return to rear (east). Now in use as offices. Pitched roof to west with irregular M-profiled hipped roofs to rear (east), concealed by brick parapet with masonry coping. Rendered chimneystacks to party walls with lipped yellow clay pots. Parapet gutters with cast-iron hopper and downpipe to south end. Red brick walling laid in Flemish bond over rendered walling to basement beneath granite plinth course. Square-headed window openings with brick voussoirs, rendered reveals and masonry sills, granite surrounds to basement. Largely six-over-six possibly original timber sliding sash windows, three-over-three to third floor and eight-over-eight to basement, replacement one-over-one to ground floor with chamfered horns. Iron guard rails to second floor, continuous cast-iron balconette to first floor and cast-iron grille to basement opening. Round-headed door opening with brick voussoirs, moulded reveals and recessed surround containing fluted frieze and moulded cornice carried on Ionic columns over plinth stops, spoked fanlight and raised-and-field timber panelled door with brass furniture. Granite entrance platform with cast-iron boot scraper, approached by six steps flanked by iron railings with decorative cast-iron corner posts on granite plinth, enclosing basement to south-side. Coal-hole cover to pavement. Street fronted on eastern side of Fitzwilliam Street Upper. Recent mews building to rear (east) and replacement boundary wall lining Lad Lane.

Appraisal

Built as a pair with the adjoining building to south (50930112), this former townhouse retains its traditional form and proportions, mellow brick which contrasts with the granite dressings, well executed ironwork, and handsome Ionic doorcase and fanlight. The development of Fitzwilliam Street Upper began on the north-end of the western side during the early-nineteenth century. Taken as a whole with Fitzwilliam Street Upper and the east-side of the Merrion Square, this uninterrupted stretch constitutes the longest piece of Georgian streetscape in Dublin. Although largely homogenous in character and form, the subtle variations between the houses are indicative of the speculative nature of development.