Survey Data

Reg No

15400604


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Artistic, Historical


Original Use

House


In Use As

House


Date

1850 - 1870


Coordinates

233095, 265239


Date Recorded

16/11/2004


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Detached three-bay two-storey house (over hidden basement) with central single-bay breakfront to entrance front (south) having eaves pediment over, rebuilt c.1860 in the style of an Italianate villa. Single-storey canted-bay windows to side elevations (east and west). Possibly incorporating the fabric of an earlier house (Ordnance Survey Map 1838: Lewis 1837). Hipped natural slate roof having an eaves cornice with paired brackets and a central pair of chimneystacks with moulded cornices. Roughcast rendered walls with sill courses, a string course at first floor level and raised quoins to the corners. Round-headed window openings with a Venetian opening to first floor of breakfront, framed by an aedicule. Set back from road in extensive grounds to the southeast of Rathowen with extensive complex of outbuildings to the north.

Appraisal

An elegant and robustly detailed middle-sized house, which is very well-built and displays obvious architectural aspirations. This house was rebuilt in the style of an Italianate Villa in the mid nineteenth-century and possibly incorporating the fabric of an earlier house on the same site. It retains its early form, character and fabric. It is very well embellished, whilst the contrast between by cut stone embellishments and the render walls creates an appealing visual statement in the rural landscape. This house looks quite similar to Lyrath House in Co. Kilkenny (12402005), an Italianate composition of similar proportions and detailing, which was built to designs by the eminent architect John McCurdy (1824 - 1885) in 1863. Ardglass House is an unusual house to find in such a rural location, its form being reminiscent of a mid nineteenth-century urban villa of the type found in the Grosvenor Road area of Dublin amongst other examples. This house has historical connections with the Bond Family, an important family in the area who donated the site for St. Mary's Roman Catholic church (15303008), at nearby Rathowen, in 1846. A previous Ardglass House, on the same site, was the home of a Major A. P. Bond in 1837, a former deputy lieutenant for Co. Longford, and the present house was in the ownership of William Perry Bond, Esq., Justice of the Peace, c.1880. Ardglass House, together with many of its ancillary structures, remains an important element of the architectural heritage of Westmeath.