Reg No
15621025
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Social
Original Use
House
In Use As
House
Date
1700 - 1840
Coordinates
296840, 103699
Date Recorded
30/10/2007
Date Updated
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Detached five-bay single-storey lobby entry thatched house with dormer attic, extant 1840, on a T-shaped plan centred on single-bay single-storey gabled windbreak. Refenestrated, 2001. Reroofed, 2007. Chicken wire-covered replacement hipped or hipped gabled oat thatch roof with rope twist above exposed hazel stretchers to ridge having exposed scallops, cement rendered central chimney stack having concrete capping supporting terracotta pot, and blind stretchers to untrimmed eaves having blind scallops. Rendered battered wall to front (south) elevation; limewashed lime rendered or roughcast surface finish (remainder). Square-headed central door opening with concrete threshold, and concealed dressings framing replacement timber boarded or tongue-and-groove timber panelled door. Square-headed window openings with concrete or rendered sills, and concealed dressings framing replacement timber casement windows replacing one-over-one (ground floor) or three-over-six (half-dormer attic) timber sash windows with one-over-one (ground floor) or six-over-six (dormer attic) timber sash windows to rear (north) elevation having part exposed sash boxes. Set perpendicular to road with limewashed piers to perimeter supporting flat iron double gates.
A house identified as an integral component of the vernacular heritage of Kilmore Quay by such attributes as the alignment perpendicular to the road; the lobby entry plan form centred on a parapeted windbreak; the construction in unrefined local materials displaying a pronounced battered silhouette with sections of "daub" or mud suggested by an entry in the "House and Building Return" Form of the National Census (NA 1901; NA 1911); the disproportionate bias of solid to void in the massing; and the high pitched split-level roof showing an oat thatch finish presently (2007) undergoing replenishment: meanwhile, a pronounced masonry break clearly illustrates the continued linear development of the house in the later nineteenth century.