Designed landscape feature, Ballyfin Demesne, Co. Laois
Co. Laois |
Designed Landscapes
Within the grounds of Ballyfin Demesne in County Laois, the first edition Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1841 marks a designed landscape feature that has since left no visible trace on the ground.
There is nothing to see, which is itself a quietly curious fact: a deliberate act of design, carefully recorded by surveyors at a particular moment in time, has been entirely absorbed back into the landscape.
Ballyfin was one of the great demesnes of the Irish midlands, and a designed landscape feature would have been typical of the formal and picturesque traditions of estate design fashionable among the Anglo-Irish landowning class during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Such features could range from ornamental lakes and ha-has, the sunken boundary walls that preserved an unbroken view across grounds, to follies, grottoes, or carefully positioned tree plantings. The 1841 mapping records this one at a specific location within the estate boundary, suggesting it was substantial or distinct enough to merit inclusion, yet nothing of it survives above ground today, whether lost to later landscaping, gradual decay, or simple erasure over time.