Reg No
15502172
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural
Original Use
House
Historical Use
Guest house/b&b
In Use As
House
Date
1790 - 1810
Coordinates
304740, 122119
Date Recorded
10/01/2007
Date Updated
--/--/--
Attached two-bay three-storey house, c.1800, possibly over basement. Renovated, c.1900. Reroofed, c.1950. In use as guesthouse or offices, 1992/6. Refenestrated, post-1996. Renovated and part refenestrated, 2006, to accommodate commercial use to ground floor. Pitched roof with replacement fibre-cement slate, c.1950, clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stack over red brick Running bond construction having red brick stepped capping supporting terracotta or yellow terracotta pots, and cast-iron rainwater goods on rendered eaves having iron ties. Rendered, ruled and lined walls. Square-headed window openings with cut-stone sills, and replacement uPVC casement windows, post-1996 (replacing one-over-one or two-over-two timber sash windows), having replacement one-over-one sash windows, 2006, to ground floor. Square-headed door opening probably originally elliptical- or round-headed with threshold, moulded rendered surround, c.1900, and replacement timber panelled door, 2006, having overlight. Interior to ground floor remodelled, 2006, retaining some cut-black or red marble chimneypieces, timber panelled shutters to some window openings, and run-moulded plasterwork cornices to some ceilings. Street fronted with concrete footpath to front.
An amiable house of the middle size representing an important element of the late eighteenth- or early nineteenth-century domestic architectural legacy of Wexford Town with attributes identifying a pleasant, if understated design programme including the vertical thrust of the massing, the slight diminishing in scale of the openings on each floor in the Classical manner producing a graduated visual effect, the reserved decorative articulation limited to a simple, if later doorcase, and so on. However, while some replacement fittings allude to the form of the historic or original predecessors, the character or external expression of the house in George's Street Lower has not benefited from the introduction of replacement fittings to the remainder of the openings.