Reg No
50010615
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural
Original Use
House
In Use As
Shop/retail outlet
Date
1840 - 1860
Coordinates
315851, 234987
Date Recorded
04/11/2011
Date Updated
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Terraced two-bay four-storey house, built c.1850, previously in use as factory, hotel and then retail outlet. Currently vacant. Hipped roof running perpendicular to street behind rendered parapet with squared granite coping. Rendered walls with rendered quoin band to west end of facade. Square-headed window openings with rendered reveals and granite sills, currently boarded up with timber. Replacement timber shopfront incorporating access to upper floors, openings concealed behind security shutter.
This building, together with its neighbours, provides an example of how subtle variations in building width and treatments can add interest and variety to a streetscape. This building has the typical two-bay width of many buildings in the area, and its chanelled quoins adds visual interest to the structure. Shown as being developed on Brookings map of 1728, the building may well have been originally gable-fronted and might incorporate early fabric. The building also appears in Shaw's Pictorial Directory of 1850 as being in use as Naughton and Co., bread and biscuit manufacturers. The street forms part of an early route running from Saint Mary's Abbey to the north coast at Clontarf along Ballybough Lane, which was incorporated from an early date into the structure of the north Georgian city and which provides the dividing line between the older city grid and the northern Georgian suburb developed by the Gardiner estate.