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Text re this Irish
building from Niall McLaughlin Architects:
Dirk Cove House
Conversion of a ruined Coastguard Station, Ireland
Galley Head Lighthouse is one of a chain of beacons built to protect shipping
along the rock-bound, stormy Atlantic coast of Ireland. Its name belongs
with Fastnet and Mizen Head, among the litany of famous storms and wrecks
synonymous with this coastline. On this wild shore, almost all the weather
sunshine and rain - comes from the ocean, from the south-west.
The coastguards built their station and launch ramp in the lee of the
headland out of the wind - to ensure the maximum number of sheltered
launches. The old stone cottage, sitting above the ramp, is made of crude
rubble walls one metre thick, but one doorway inside is glazed in delicate
cut-crystal, it bears a brass plate with the name SS Lusitania.
We have converted the old cottage and boathouse and we have added an extension.
An asymmetric, cruciform cloister links them. The new arrangement is built
around a little courtyard. By placing the site out of the wind, the coastguards
also put it out of the sun. It faces east-south-east and it looses the
light early in the day. In Ireland, sunlight is precious stuff and we
have designed the new extension to capture the last scraps of sun as it
declines behind the hill in the early evening. The living space stretches
out towards the water and away from the growing shadow of the hill. The
form of the new living room is shaped to capture light.
You discover the ocean through the house. The organisation of the building
is based on a journey towards a view of the horizon. The driveway is screened
from the sea and the entrance is a small courtyard. When you open the
front door you see along a glazed passage towards a table, beyond which
a window frames a view of a distant beach across the bay. As you walk
towards the table, two new spaces open up. One is the main living space
overlooking the sea. The other is the view out towards the open ocean
to the south. By passing around the chimney you come to the edge of the
land, where the whole panorama is brought together. In this way the house
becomes the frame for an experience of the larger landscape. The architecture
is understood by looking out from it.
The old cottage has been turned into a master bedroom and the boathouse
is for guest bedrooms. The kitchen, dining and sitting rooms are in the
new extension. We have rebuilt part of the sea wall and provided steps
down to the shore from the sheltered courtyard.
Dirk Cove means Dagger Cove in Gaelic. It could take its name from the
beautiful shards of metamorphic rock that finger out to the sea from the
base of the small cliffs. Between tides they fill with slivers of water
giving a strong south-easterly orientation to the grain of the site. The
new extension is aligned with this geological undertow and it projects
beyond the sea wall, reaching ten metres out towards the water. It is
a happy accident that this alignment with the base rock also opens the
courtyard out towards the sun.
The house was finished in Summer 2004. This autumn, it survived a one-in-twenty
year storm when a Force10 south-east gale and a spring tide lined up together
and hurled breakers right up to the projecting canopy of the roof.
Photographs copyright : Niall McLaughlin
Clonakilty house, Ireland - text from Niall McLaughlin Architects 190107
House at Clonakilty : RIBA
Awards 2005
Dirk Cove House : Niall
McLaughlin Architects

ARC Hull: photo copyright : Niall McLaughlin
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Dirk Cove House - Coastguard Station, Ireland
- page : adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
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