Reg No
13305003
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Original Use
House
In Use As
House
Date
1880 - 1900
Coordinates
232841, 281091
Date Recorded
24/08/2005
Date Updated
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Detached four-bay two-storey house, built c. 1890, having two full-height canted bays to front elevation (east) flanking main entrance, two-storey extension to north elevation and return to rear (west). Hipped and pitched natural slate roof with rendered chimneystacks. Roughcast rendered walls with rendered string and eaves courses and recessed square-headed panels to canted bays. Square-headed window openings with one-over-one timber sliding sash windows and concrete sills, replacement windows to end-bay/extension to north. Round-headed window opening to rear (west) with six-over-six timber sliding sash window having intersecting joinery to head. Round-headed door opening to front elevation (east) with glazed fanlight over timber panelled door and having flight of concrete steps to entrance. Multiple-bay single-storey rubble limestone masonry outbuildings to rear (west and northwest), having pitched slate roofs. Set back from road in mature grounds to the west of Granard. Pair of cast-iron gate piers with anthemion motifs and double leaf wrought and cast-iron gates with hooped heads to entrance.
This substantial house, of late nineteenth-century appearance, retains its early form and character. The canted bays and render detailing add incident to the otherwise plain front façade. This building retains much of its early fabric including timber sash windows and a natural slate roof. The round-headed window opening to the rear (stair hall) retains interesting timber joinery to the head. The form of this building suggests that it originally had a symmetrical front façade of a central doorway flanked by canted bay windows. The ornate cast and wrought-iron gates to the main entrance add incident to the roadscape to the west of Granard and are of artistic merit. The outbuildings provide valuable context to the site and they retain their original form and structure. One of the outbuildings to the northwest appears to pre-date the house (map 1838). This building is an integral element to the built heritage of Granard.