House - vernacular house, Killasseragh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
House
Along a roadside in Killasseragh, County Cork, a thatched farmhouse sits in plain view, doing something increasingly rare in the Irish countryside: it continues to be lived in.
Vernacular houses of this type, built from local materials according to practical tradition rather than architectural fashion, have been disappearing steadily from the rural landscape for generations, either falling into ruin or stripped of their original fabric during renovation. This one retains its hipped roof of thatch, a style where the roof slopes down on all four sides rather than ending in a flat gable, giving the building a low, settled appearance against the land around it.
The house presents a four-bay front to the road, meaning four openings run along its facade, though the doorway sits off-centre to the right rather than in the middle, a detail that quietly undermines any assumption of symmetry. The chimney, too, is placed off-centre to the left. These asymmetries are not mistakes; they reflect the incremental, functional logic of vernacular building, where rooms were arranged around the hearth and the door placed where it suited the interior rather than the exterior. A lean-to extension to the right suggests the house has been added to over time, the structure adapting as needs changed. The fact that it remains occupied is significant. Inhabited buildings tend to survive; empty ones, especially thatched ones, do not.