House - vernacular house, Gortmore, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
House
A thatched farmhouse in North Cork's Gortmore townland catches the eye for a reason that takes a moment to place: its roof cannot quite make up its mind.
The left end terminates in a gable, the traditional straight-sided finish where the wall rises to a point beneath the thatch, while the right end curves away into a hip, where the roof slopes down on all sides without any vertical gable face at all. This mixing of two distinct roof forms on a single building is quietly unusual, suggesting the house may have grown or been modified over time, with one end following a different constructional logic than the other.
The house sits on the north side of the road, presenting a front of five bays, a span that places it among the more substantial vernacular dwellings of its type. A shallow central porch marks the entrance without any great ceremony. Vernacular architecture, meaning buildings put up by local craftsmen using local materials and conventions rather than formally trained architects, rarely announces itself, and this house is no exception. The thatched roof is centred by a single brick chimney, a detail that points to a household organised around one main hearth. The brick, as opposed to stone, chimney stack is a small but telling material choice in a region where fieldstone would have been the obvious alternative.