Reg No
21521077
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic, Historical, Social
Original Use
Gate lodge
In Use As
Gate lodge
Date
1850 - 1870
Coordinates
157016, 155862
Date Recorded
29/06/2005
Date Updated
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Detached three-bay single-storey limestone gate lodge, built in 1851, comprising a simple symmetrical composition to both front and rear elevation, with a centrally-placed door opening flanked by square-headed window openings. Pitched artificial slate roof with elaborate ashlar chimneystacks to the gable walls. Decorative timber bargeboards to gables rising from profiled limestone corbel blocks. Rainwater goods supported on limestone corbelled blocks. Squared and snecked tooled limestone walls with flush tooled limestone quoins. Square-headed window openings with limestone ashlar surround, incorporating flush canted limestone sills, enclosing uPVC windows. Square-headed door opening, flush limestone surround, uPVC door. Snecked and coursed limestone lean-to outbuilding to one side, with plank timber gate. Enclosed from road by tall rubble limestone boundary wall. Located adjacent to fine limestone ashlar entrance gates with stop-chamfered corners, and having four-sided gabled capping stones, and original wrought-iron gates.
This modest mid nineteenth-century gate lodge forms an important component within the large convent complex of Mount Saint Vincent's. Mount Saint Vincent derives its name from the French Saint Vincent de Paul. The site was formerly known as Mount Kenneth, prior to the construction of the convent here in 1851. Catherine McAuley established the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy in 1831. The order was established in Limerick in 1838, with the support of the then Bishop Ryan of Limerick. The order flourished in Limerick City and County with convents established in Newcastlewest, Rathkeale and Adare.