IRISH STREET
27-31 Irish Street, Downpatrick, Co Down
1998
Flats and shops bring vitality
to town centre
In the middle ages, Downpatrick had no less than six religious
houses, of which the Cathedral is the only remnant today. Irish
Street, with its generally narrow houses stepping up the steep
hill to the fine three-storey Georgian house of about 1780 that
is now the police barracks, is one of the three historic streets
that made up the mediaeval core of Downpatrick - the others being
English Street with the courthouse and cathedral, and Scotch Street
with its prosperous merchants' houses. A map of 1729 shows the
street fully developed, with long narrow plots of ground at the
rear running down to bogland at the present St Patrick's Avenue.
Although like many early towns, the centre of Downpatrick has
been largely reconstructed over the years, it has a well documented
history and many of the buildings are of considerable antiquity.
No.27 is on the site of a building known as "Finniston's
half Tenement", shown on a survey of 1708, where the tenant
James Finiston paid a half year's rent of £1.3s.4d for "a
stone wall thatched house 2 storeys high, 4 back houses and spring
well". Bishop Dorrian, Catholic bishop of Down & Connor
till his death in 1885, was born at no.27 in 1814. The present
buildings are all likely to date from about 1780-1800, and the
shops would have been inserted later as the town became more commercial.
In many Ulster towns the upper floors of buildings in commercial
streets are vacant, and Hearth undertook this project in order
to encourage fuller use of the buildings in the centre of Downpatrick.
People living in the centre of a town make full use of its shops,
and in turn provide security in the town centre at night.
In the course of the restoration, the three houses have been combined
into two, and the three shops also made into two. Where original
joinery details survived, mainly in no.27, they have been retained
or repaired, and original shutters, sashes and staircase are still
extant there. The early shop windows had been replaced in nos.29
and 31, but Hearth's resident historian, Tony Merrick, had a photograph
taken about 1970 showing the houses with the original shop fronts,
from which the design for the restoration has been drawn. A cobbled
lane between stone outbuildings originally ran down hill from
the entry at no.27 to what is now the car park behind Irish Street.
Client: Hearth Revolving
Fund and Hearth Housing Association Architect: Hearth
Main Contractor: Hugh J O'Boyle Ltd, Downpatrick
Restored: 1998-99
Assisted by loans and grants from: Urban Development Programme
(IFI), Conservation Area grant, Housing Association Grant, Ulster
Garden Villages and own capital.
Accommodation: One two-bedroom flat, one one-bedroom flat, two
shops
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