Survey Data

Reg No

41400981


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural


Previous Name

Bessmont


Original Use

Outbuilding


In Use As

Outbuilding


Date

1770 - 1820


Coordinates

269303, 335219


Date Recorded

05/05/2012


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Range of outbuildings, built c.1790, to rear (west) of Bessmount Park House, comprising L-plan block to west of house and rectangular-plan ranges to north-west and south-west of main block. Pitched slate roofs, hipped to west portion of east-west leg of L-plan, cut limestone bell-cote and cast-iron bell to roof, brick eaves courses and cast-iron rainwater goods. Roughly coursed rubble stone walls having squared block-and-start quoins, painted to east elevation to interior of yard to rear of house. Cast-iron wall-ties to outbuilding range to south-west. Gauged masonry square-headed window openings, with six-over-six, two-over-two and one-over-one pane timber sliding sash windows, windows to front (east) and rear elevations, some openings blocked. Square-headed window openings and slit openings, some having red brick surrounds. Gauged masonry square-headed door openings with timber battened doors and half-doors, some openings to rear at first floor level, accessed by flights of stone steps. Three-centred arch having gauged-brick voussoirs to front, and gauged masonry voussoirs to arch to rear allowing access through main range. Three-centred arch with tooled gauged masonry voussoirs to front of south-west outbuilding. Round-plan rubble stone piers having render capping abutting some walls.

Appraisal

This group of functional structures constituted an integral component of the Bessmount Park estate and the fact that some of them remain in use is testament to the quality of their construction and the continuing importance of the home farm on demesne estates after the wider estate social structure had begun to dwindle. They were probably built at the same time as the original house in the later 1700s. Modestly constructed, they retain much of their original, simple form, and are typical of the design of outbuildings in Ulster, with upper floors for grain storage accessed by flights of stone steps. The various ranges of outbuildings from a pleasing contrast with the dramatic architecture of the house itself, the marked difference in style being somewhat incongruous and intriguing.