House - vernacular house, Macroney, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
House
What catches the eye about this modest farmhouse in Macroney, a townland in North Cork, is how deliberately asymmetrical it is.
The door sits not at the centre of the four-bay front elevation where convention might place it, but to the left. The chimney, meanwhile, rises to the right, off-centre in the opposite direction. It is a small but telling detail, the kind of thing that separates a building grown from practical necessity from one shaped by formal design.
The house is a surviving example of Irish vernacular domestic architecture, a category that covers the ordinary rural dwellings built by farming families over several centuries, generally without architects, and according to local traditions of construction rather than pattern books. The thatched hipped roof, where the roofline slopes down on all four sides rather than ending in a gable, is a feature associated with older building practice in Munster and suggests a degree of age and continuity with pre-Victorian rural building types. Such houses are increasingly rare in the landscape, as thatch requires ongoing maintenance and many have been re-roofed or demolished over the decades. This one sits on the north side of the road, its front elevation facing south, an orientation that would have made practical sense for light and warmth.


