Country house, Ballyderown, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Main Houses
What catches the eye at Ballyderown is not the house itself so much as the fish pond to its west, a feature with a small island at its centre, recorded on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1905 and still present today.
Ornamental ponds with islands were a mark of considered landscaping on Irish country estates, often doubling as a practical source of fresh fish for the household table, and this one survives quietly in the North Cork countryside while the house beside it receives rather less attention.
The house itself dates in appearance to the early nineteenth century, presenting a wide, gabled entrance front of three bays to the south-west. A pediment, the triangular classical gable element typically used to give a facade a sense of formality and proportion, runs across the entire front, punctuated at its apex by an oculus, a small circular window. Below, sash windows flank a central doorway with a segmental-headed light, the slightly flattened arch above the door opening being a common refinement of the period. The building has grown in stages: a two-bay, two-storey flat-roofed extension prolongs the front elevation to the south-east, and further additions push out to the north-west. Farm buildings sit to the rear, grounding the whole composition in working agricultural life rather than pure gentility. Immediately adjacent is a walled garden, its northern wall lined in brick, a detail that points to deliberate horticultural effort, since brick absorbs and retains heat and was often used to espalier fruit trees along sheltered kitchen garden walls.
