Reg No
11900305
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Historical, Social
Original Use
House
In Use As
House
Date
1880 - 1920
Coordinates
273329, 241287
Date Recorded
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Date Updated
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Group of three terraced three-bay single-storey houses with half-dormer attics, c.1900, on a corner site with one retaining original aspect. House to left (east) renovated, c.1970, with single-bay single-storey flat-roofed advanced porch added to centre. House to centre refenestrated, c.1980. Gable-ended roof (shared) with slate (gabled to half-dormer attic windows). Clay ridge tiles (crested to half-dormer attic windows). Rendered chimney stacks. Timber eaves and bargeboards. Cast-iron rainwater goods. Flat-roofed to porch to left (east). Bitumen felt. Timber eaves. Roughcast walls. Painted. Square-headed window openings. Stone sills. Original 2/2 timber sash windows (replacement timber casement windows, c.1980, to house to centre). Replacement timber panelled and glazed timber panelled doors, c.1970-c.1980. Set back from line of road in own grounds on a corner site. Landscaped forecourts to front. Rubble stone boundary wall to front and to side (west).
This group of three terraced houses is a fine and attractive example of late nineteenth-/early twentieth-century domestic architecture that has been well-maintained to retain much of the original form and character. The houses are of some social and historic interest, representing an early small-scale residential development in the locality. The houses make a distinctive impression in the rural setting, having been designed in a somewhat suburban style, and are a prominent feature on the side of the road, especially when viewed from the nearby Kilmore Bridge (11900303/KD-03-03). Well-maintained, each house retains some early or original salient features and materials, with the house to right (west) little altered and retaining original fenestration and a slate roof having cast-iron rainwater goods.