Reg No
21512048
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Original Use
House
In Use As
House
Date
1890 - 1910
Coordinates
156856, 157422
Date Recorded
27/05/2005
Date Updated
--/--/--
Terraced three-bay two-storey over basement red brick house, built c. 1900, facing north, having a gabled breakfront with attic second floor level, and shared pedimented doorcase. Two-storey return shared with neighbouring house. Pitched natural slate roof with terracotta ridge tiles, cement coping to gable. Red brick chimneystack to party wall with stringcourse and concrete flaunching. Red brick chimneystack to party wall of return, with moulded clay pots. uPVC rainwater goods. Red brick walls laid in English garden wall bond with rendered basement elevation and moulded brick course delineating ground floor level. Cement rendered rear elevation. Square-headed window openings, forming pairs to breakfront and single opening over front door, each pair with red brick mullion pier, profiled terracotta lintels, moulded red brick sills. Square-headed and segmental-headed window openings to rear elevation. All openings have uPVC windows. Shared entrance porch arrived at by flight of nosed limestone steps with flanking red brick plinth wall with decorated terracotta capping to pier. Red brick porch comprises elongated pilaster supporting dentil cornice with curvilinear and triangular pediment above. Profiled lintel above glazed timber framed porch door. Tiled porch platform with original flat-panelled timber door having horizontal centre panel and glazed upper panels. Glazed segmental-arched overlight. Concrete front site path to front door and steps to basement level. Painted rendered boundary plinth wall with cast-iron railings and terminating brick pier with replacement steel gate. Shared lane gives access to rear site between Moyola and Ardara Terraces.
This house, which forms part of a terrace of six uniform houses, has been well-maintained to present an original aspect with the most salient features intact. Loss of original window openings is regrettable. Together with the remainder of this terrace this house forms an important variation in the late Victorian, and Edwardian typologies that exist on Ennis Road and the inner suburbs of the City.