Reg No
22902025
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Social
Previous Name
Glencairn Abbey
Original Use
Church/chapel
In Use As
Church/chapel
Date
1925 - 1935
Coordinates
199886, 98694
Date Recorded
05/01/2004
Date Updated
--/--/--
Attached seven-bay double-height Catholic chapel, built 1930, with single-bay single-storey sacristy to south-east having single-bay single-storey gabled projecting porch, and single-bay three-stage advanced corner tower to south-west on a square plan having single-bay single-storey gabled flanking porch to left (north). Pitched slate roofs (gabled to porches) with decorative clay ridge tiles, cut-stone coping to gables having cross finials to apexes, and profiled cast-iron rainwater goods. Roof to tower not visible behind parapet. Broken coursed tooled limestone ashlar walls with stepped buttresses piers to nave having red brick detailing, stepped corner buttresses to sacristy, and cut-limestone dressings to tower including stringcourses to each stage, and battlemented parapet having corner pinnacles with ‘spirelets’ having wrought iron finials to apexes. Pointed-arch window openings (paired to sacristy) with cut-stone sills, block-and-start surrounds, and leaded stained glass panels. Square-headed window openings to first and to second stage to tower with cut-limestone sills, surrounds, hood mouldings over, and fixed-pane leaded windows. Paired lancet openings to top (bell) stage to tower with cut-limestone chamfered surrounds, hood mouldings over, and louvered panel fittings. Pointed-arch door openings to porches with cut-limestone chamfered reveals, hood mouldings over, and timber panelled doors. Set back from road in grounds shared with Saint Mary's Abbey.
An appealing, modest-scale chapel forming an important element of the Saint Mary's Abbey, attesting to the conversion of the site from use as a private residence to a convent in the early to mid twentieth century. The construction in limestone ashlar is indicative of high quality stone masonry, and serves to produce a sombre tone that is augmented by the sparse detailing throughout. Well maintained, the chapel retains its original form and fabric, and contributes to the visual appeal of the site.