Reg No
14807013
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic, Social
Original Use
Hotel
In Use As
Hotel
Date
1900 - 1920
Coordinates
233876, 225047
Date Recorded
21/10/2004
Date Updated
--/--/--
Detached four-bay three-storey hotel, built c.1910, fronting directly onto street with modern hotel extension to rear. Roof hidden behind parapet with slate roof to projecting bay to north. Tooled limestone to ground floor with arcaded openings with engaged columns, tooled limestone arches and decorative keystones. Tooled limestone fascia and cornice. Red brick walls to upper storeys with limestone pilasters separating bays and string course separating first and second floor. Frieze and cornice surmounting pilasters of second floor. Decorative red brick curvilinear pediment with limestone dressing, finials and date plaque: 1852–1910. Smooth rendered walls to side elevations. Square-headed window openings to façade with limestone surrounds and sills and timber casement windows. Paired windows to central bays of second floor, all with limestone surrounds with frieze, cornice and limestone sills. Round-headed window openings to northern elevation with replacement timber windows. Display windows within brass surround to ground floor. Door openings within limestone arcaded ground floor with brass and glazed doors.
Similar in execution to the shopping centre across the road, The Bridge House has become a landmark within Tullamore. It was built for P.H Egan Ltd who owned the maltings at the east end of Harbour Street. T.F. McNamara is a possible architect for this hotel. Standing out on a predominantly Georgian street, the Bridge House immediately demands one's attention with its varied use of materials on the façade, from red brick walls, limestone dressings and a pediment, to the use of brass and glass on its ground floor. Good attention to detail is clearly visible and elevates this building to one of importance. The Bridge House with its design form and use of materials is a structure of importance within Tullamore and one that is integral to the streetscape.