Country house, Newborough, Co. Cork
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Main Houses
The western bow has gone.
That collapse, somewhere between neglect and time, is one of the more telling details about the ruined country house at Newborough in County Cork, where the asymmetry of what remains speaks quietly to what was once a carefully composed building. The entrance front still presents its central fanlighted doorway, flanked by limestone pilasters and reached by steps that rise over the basement storey, an arrangement typical of late Georgian ambition in rural Ireland. The southern elevation, the side the household would have regarded as the view front, retains four bays, and on the western wall a round-headed stairway window sits above a smaller oculus opening, a pairing of forms that suggests someone, at the design stage, was thinking carefully about light and proportion.
The house dates from the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century and is built over a basement, with three storeys above. Its entrance front was originally organised around a central bay flanked by two projecting bows, each of two bays and three storeys, a composition associated with the more confident phase of Irish Georgian domestic architecture. The hipped roof, which would have pulled the whole ensemble together visually, has partially collapsed. What makes the site notably uneven in its state of preservation is the survival, in good condition, of the Victorian steward's house nearby. The steward's house, built to accommodate the estate manager responsible for the day-to-day running of the property, outlasted the main building in practical terms, and its relative intactness beside the ruin creates an odd domestic contrast, the servant's quarters whole where the principal house is hollowed out.