House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography, WindowsHouse at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior PhotographyHouse at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography, WindowsHouse at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Interior Photography, Living Room, Windows, TableHouse at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - More Images+ 15

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House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Aidan McGrath

Text description provided by the architects. The site is located within the partly walled demesne of Ballyscullion Park, on the shores of Lough Beg in mid-Ulster.

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Aidan McGrath
House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Aidan McGrath

The park was established in the late 18th Century for a dwelling that was never completed, a later house by Lanyon in the 1840s now commands the demesne, overlooking the lough, with distant views beyond. Most of the character of the original parkland has survived in an unusually pure form. It is an almost perfect invocation of place; a classical idealized and austere landscape with the simplest manner of augmentation, relying solely on the planting of large tree clumps. The house is situated on the edge of one of these clumps, in a natural clearing of ancient oak woodland.

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography, Forest
© Aidan McGrath
House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Image 15 of 20
Site location

The brief called for a family home that was bright, spacious, and respectful of both the open parkland views and the historic woodland. The clients did not want a conspicuous house, preferring a restrained approach. Their holding within the park extended to 100 acres, and the siting of the house was negotiated with Planning on the basis of a long-demolished house in the woodland, a pragmatic location rather than one planned in the context of the 18th Century landscape setting.

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography
© Aidan McGrath

The plan comprises two rectilinear blocks, placed to create an enclosure, retaining a simple reading of form. The main block contains living spaces on the ground floor, with sleeping spaces above, and rooms arranged sequentially. A low block appended to the main block provides support, enabling most rooms to be the full plan depth. The secondary block is behind, parallel to the main block, and contains garages and stores. The blocks are linked by a wall, defining public and private outdoor spaces.

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Image 16 of 20
Plans

The forms reference traditional rural buildings and are refined in detail, with restrained openings to the woodland, gradually opening up to the landscape, and apertures carefully proportioned and positioned to frame views. Beech hedges are intended to create necessary enclosures. From the open parkland, handmade bricks in hues of grey and the zinc roof help the dwelling harmonize with the dark trees beyond.

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Exterior Photography
© Aidan McGrath
House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Interior Photography, Living Room, Windows, Table
© Aidan McGrath

There is a relationship to the landscape interpreted from the house in the framed views, splayed reveals, and open corners, through thickened walls and robust joinery, gestures to a magnificent setting, and also a reading from the landscape, where from the parkland, in the undulating terrain of rises, hollows and tree clumps, it is simultaneously the building that reveals the landscape and the landscape that reveals the building.

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Interior Photography
© Aidan McGrath
House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Interior Photography, Countertop
© Aidan McGrath

This was the first project in the practice where a nuanced landscape was the starting point for the scheme, and it would remain an important reference project for the practice over 10 years. It is our longest-running project incorporating much of our developing architectural vocabulary. The outcome is significant in that the project was self-built over 5 years by its owner, who became invested in the process of making careful architecture, and who now takes on the role of managing and developing this powerful landscape.

House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath - Interior Photography, Table, Chair
© Aidan McGrath

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Cite: "House at Lough Beg / McGonigle McGrath" 25 Jul 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1004495/house-at-lough-beg-mcgonigle-mcgrath> ISSN 0719-8884

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