Skip to content
Buildings(v1.0)

Historic Building Details


HB Ref No:
HB23/17/007 F


Extent of Listing:
Not Listed


Date of Construction:
1900 - 1919


Address :
NOS Quarters Palace Barracks Holywood County Down


Townland:
Knocknagoney






Survey 2:
Record Only

Date of Listing:

Date of De-listing:

Current Use:
House

Former Use
House

Conservation Area:
No

Industrial Archaeology:
No

Vernacular:
No

Thatched:
No

Monument:
No

Derelict:
No




OS Map No:
130/08

IG Ref:
J3929 7773





Owner Category


Miscellaneous

Exterior Description And Setting


Detached two-storey redbrick house, built c.1900. L-shaped on plan facing west within Palace Barracks complex, Holywood. Hipped natural slate roof with roll-moulded black clay ridge tiles and pair of large redbrick chimneystacks rising from both side elevations. Plastic rainwater goods to plastic fascia and eaves. Redbrick walling laid in stretcher bond with projecting brick plinth course and moulded brick sill courses. Segmental-headed window openings with moulded brick continuous sill course and brick aprons with uPVC windows. Front elevation has a gable to the south with sandstone coping and kneeler stones with paired windows to both floors below. To the centre is a flat-roofed section with a pair of slender opes and a segmental-headed door opening below having replacement hardwood panelled door. North side elevation is blank. Rear elevation has a corresponding gable with no openings and a flat-roofed central projection. Small rear yard enclosed by tall redbrick wall. South side elevation has off-centre paired window openings to each floor. Setting: Set within the Palace Barracks complex fronting onto a bitmac road. Roof Natural slate RWG Plastic Walling Redbrick Windows uPVC

Architects


Not Known

Historical Information


The barracks was constructed between 1894 and 1898 by various contractors, (Belfast Newsletter; First Survey Information) and is likely to have been designed by the War Office Architects department, based in London. The present house was built in 1898 by the contractor, Fitzpatrick of Belfast at a cost of £1,089. (First Survey Information) From the mid-1880s the British Army established the Kinnegar camp at Holywood as a training ground for regiments stationed in Belfast. The camp could accommodate more than 400 personnel under canvas. (Auld, p.129-30) The Bishop’s Palace in Holywood, formerly the official residence of the Bishop of Down and Connor and Dromore, fell vacant on the succession of Bishop William Reeves in 1886, who had a residence in Dunmurry. (Clergy of Down and Dromore, Part II, p.23; Brett, p.143) Attempts were made to sell the Palace and grounds but these proved fruitless until in 1890 an offer of £1,000 from the War Office was accepted. (Belfast Newsletter) By 1891 the palace and grounds were being used for training by the Royal Irish Rifles and the site is recorded as a military barracks in valuation records of that year. (Annual Revisions) In 1893 work began on officers’ quarters and in 1894 the construction of barracks. By September 1896 the barracks were nearing completion and the old palace had been demolished. Four blocks which comprised accommodation for the men were already finished. The Belfast Newsletter described the scheme, which was pioneering in its day, “In all there will be nine blocks, constructed to quarter one regiment of infantry. Each block will afford accommodation for 84 men and two unmarried sergeants. A recreation establishment of the newest type is in course of construction which will contain lecture-room, coffee-room, billiard-room, and a canteen, with separate accommodation for corporals. The usual cookhouses, baths, and workshops, which appear to be very numerous, are in the course of erection. A sergeants’ mess establishment and guardhouses are being erected near the site of the central lodge of the old palace. The commanding officer’s quarters is a separate building and is situated at the south-west angle of the grounds. The officers’ quarters will accommodate twenty-seven officers, with mess establishment...An hospital is almost completed, with a medical officer’s residence adjoining, which is the first time in this part of the country that accommodation for a medical staff has been constructed in conjunction with a military hospital. There is also in course of construction quartermaster’s and warrant officers’ quarters and there will also be erected several blocks of buildings for the accommodation of married men. These houses will be erected at the north end of the park, along the side of the road known locally as Jackson’s Road. The buildings are lighted throughout with gas, supplied by the Holywood Gas Company Limited. The water is supplied by the Belfast Water Commissioners. The sanitary arrangements are perfect. Nothing has been left undone for the comfort and health of the men, who seem well pleased with their new quarters.” (Belfast Newsletter) The records of a parliamentary debate of 1907, in which improving the accommodation at Holywood barracks was discussed, noted that, “There was much more difficulty in recruiting in Ireland than in any other part of the UK and therefore it was important to make the barracks in Ireland as attractive as possible.” (The Parliamentary Debates) References: Primary Sources 1. PRONI OS/6/3/1/1 – First Edition OS Map 1834 2. PRONI OS/6/3/1/2 – Second Edition OS map 1858 3. PRONI OS/6/3/1/3 – Third Edition OS Map 1900-02 4. PRONI OS/6/3/1/4 – Fourth Edition OS Map 1919-31 5. PRONI OS/6/3/1/5 – Fifth Edition OS Map 1938-41 6. PRONI VAL/12/B/17/2E – Annual Revisions 7. Belfast Newsletter, 5th March 1887 8. Belfast Newsletter, 4th April, 1888 9. Belfast Newsletter, 31st October 1890 10. Belfast Newsletter, 15th June 1891 11. Belfast Newsletter, 25th September 1891 12. Belfast Newsletter, 3rd January 1893 13. Belfast Newsletter, 2nd January 1894 14. Belfast Newsletter, 30th September 1896 15. The Parliamentary Debates, 1907 16. First Survey Information, 1989 Secondary Sources 1. Auld, C. “Holywood Co Down, Then and Now” Holywood: Con Auld, 2002 2. Brett, C.E.B. “Buildings of North County Down” Belfast: Ulster Architectural Heritage Society, 2002 3. Rankin, F., Leslie, Canon, J.B., Swanzy, Dean H.B. “Clergy of Down and Dromore” Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation, 1996

Criteria for Listing


Architectural Interest

Not listed

Historic Interest

Not listed



Evaluation


Detached two-storey redbrick house, built c.1900. L-shaped on plan facing west within Palace Barracks complex, Holywood. Having lost much original fabric this modest early twentieth-century house is of little architectural interest. The barracks site is of interest as a purpose-built military complex of a relatively late date and as an example of developments in housing military personnel.

General Comments


Please note this record has been renumbered it was previously recorded as HB23/17/011

Date of Survey


24 January 2011