Reg No
13401707
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural
Original Use
House
Date
1780 - 1820
Coordinates
202824, 265424
Date Recorded
15/08/2005
Date Updated
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Detached five-bay single-storey vernacular house, built c. 1800, having later flat-roofed single-bay entrance porch to the front elevation (northeast), added c. 1940. Now disused. Pitched corrugated-asbestos roof with two rendered chimneystacks and cast-iron rainwater goods. Pebbledashed walls with lined-and-ruled rendered finish porch. Square-headed window openings with two-over-two pane timber sliding sash windows and rendered sills. Square-headed door opening to north face of porch having timber battened door. Set back from road in own grounds to the southeast of Lanesborough. House aligned at right angle to the road alignment. Single-storey outbuilding to east of house site with pitched corrugated-metal roof, random rubble limestone walls and squared-headed openings. Rubble stone boundary walls to road-frontage (north). Entrance gateway to the east of house having a pair of rendered gate piers (on square-plan) having moulded render caps and wrought-iron gate.
Although disused, this modest vernacular house retains much of its early character, fabric and form. The steeply pitched roof suggests that this building was formerly thatched. The positions of the chimneystacks hint that this building was extended along its length to the southeast at some stage. The asymmetrical layout of the window openings is a characteristic feature of the vernacular heritage of Ireland. This building is aligned at a right-angle to the road alignment, another characteristic feature of buildings of this type. Buildings of this type were once a ubiquitous feature of the rural Irish landscape but are now becoming increasingly rare. The porch is a later addition, perhaps added during the first half of the twentieth century. The simple outbuildings to the southeast/east, and the rubble stone boundary wall to the north add to the setting and context of this building, which is a modest element of the built heritage of the local area.