Reg No
50030155
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural
Original Use
House
In Use As
House
Date
1800 - 1840
Coordinates
319339, 236149
Date Recorded
06/10/2014
Date Updated
--/--/--
Detached three-bay two-storey house, built c. 1820, having flat-roofed openwork porch addition to front (west) and single-storey canted-bay window to rear, and three-bay two-storey late nineteenth-century extension to north with pedimented central bay. Hipped slate roof with pebbledash rendered chimneystacks. Pebbledash rendered walls. Square-headed window openings having cut granite sills. Six-over-six pane timber sliding sash windows. Concrete steps to tiled entrance platform to porch. Carved timber columns and braces to porch. Square-headed door opening with double-leaf half-glazed timber doors and decorative overlight. Timber battened door with hipped slate canopy to extension. Single-storey outbuildings to rear with natural slate roofs, painted brick walls and some cast-iron windows and timber battened doors. Front garden enclosed by lined-and-ruled rendered walls with granite capping and cast-iron railings. Two sets of cast-iron gates.
This house is substantially intact and much of its traditional character and charm. Historic maps indicate that the house had substantial grounds to the rear and south, reflected in the extent of surviving outbuildings. Castle Avenue was one of the earliest streets laid out in Clontarf, connecting Clontarf Castle with the seafront to the south, and No. 35 is among the earliest buildings on the avenue.