Reg No
13831039
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Historical, Social
Previous Name
Greenore Coastguard Station
Original Use
Worker's house
Historical Use
Barracks
In Use As
House
Date
1860 - 1880
Coordinates
322516, 310743
Date Recorded
08/08/2005
Date Updated
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Terraced two-bay two-storey former coastguard house, built c. 1870, now in private domestic use. Rectangular-plan, lean-to porch to east. Pitched slate roof, clay ridge tiles, painted smooth rendered corbelled chimneystack with clay pots, painted smooth rendered projecting eaves with rendered soffit supported on moulded brackets, exposed rafter ends to east, moulded cast-iron gutters, cast-iron downpipe. Painted smooth rendered walling, plinth to west. Segmental-headed (west) and square-headed (east) window openings, painted stone sills, painted timber two-over-two (west) and six-over-six (east) sliding sash windows; square-headed painted timber pivot windows to porch and first floor. Square-headed door opening to porch, painted timber eight-panel door, granite step. One of a terrace of five, communal yard to east with two-bay single-storey painted smooth rendered outbuilding, pitched slate roof, square-headed door openings, painted timber vertically-sheeted doors; large concrete water tank to west of outbuilding.
This building was built as one of a group of coastguard houses on the outskirts of the village of Greenore. Greenore was developed during the late-nineteenth century to house the workers of the London and North Western Railway and the new port which was completed in 1873. The coastguard houses were built as a direct response to the busy port. The houses form an important group of structures and retain many original features. They were also occupied by British soldiers in the early-twentieth century during the Civil War. As a result of their historical, social and architectural interest they form a significant part of Greenore's built heritage.