Country house, Castletown, Co. Cork
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Main Houses
The Ionic portico still stands at the entrance front of this early nineteenth-century house near Castletown in County Cork, its columns and moulded plaster detail intact enough to suggest what the building once tried to say about itself.
The roof has long since collapsed, and the hipped structure that originally covered the two-storey block is gone entirely, leaving the decorative ambitions of the facade exposed to the sky in a way its builders never intended.
The house dates from the early 1800s, a period when a particular kind of Irish rural confidence expressed itself in neoclassical detail borrowed from pattern books and applied to relatively modest country houses. This one followed a recognisable formula: a five-bay entrance front facing northeast, a central door flanked by sidelights, and an Ionic portico, the order distinguished by its scrolled capitals, projecting forward to mark the entrance with a degree of ceremony. Above the door, tripartite windows, divided into three lights, added further formality. The house was two bays deep, with additions made to the rear at some point, suggesting a household that expanded its needs over time. Farm buildings stood a short distance to the northwest, the working half of an arrangement that the decorated front was designed to keep visually separate.