Probably the best...
CARLSBERG donāt do house sales. But if they did, they just might come up with Sunville.
Envy is a sin, not to mention jealousy and covetousness, but be prepared to err on all three counts when you enter Sunville.
A former Cork city planner once joked that people in Cork didnāt want too much. Theyād be happy, he suggested, with a house just off St Patrick Street, with private gardens and a sea view.
Sunville isnāt quite that. Itās more.
Period house? Check.
Modern comfort? Check.
Award-winning architecture? Check.
Space? Light? Check and check again.
Views? Sure, river and harbour.
Privacy? Oh yes.
Location? Just a stroll to St Patrick Street, core of the European City of Culture. Itās Cork, like. Old Cork.
Needing work? Nope.
Affordable? Well, you canāt have everything.
Extolling Sunvlleās virtues would take pages, and even with the superlatives exhausted and Denis Scannellās skills behind the lens stretched, the impression conveyed would still be flat in comparison to the reality.
Sunville is generous with its charms, spreading them out over three levels and about 7,000 sq ft of living space and home office potential.
Its original core dates to the early 1800s, but it has been added to and enhanced down the years, with features like its added-on wrought iron balcony across the main reception rooms. In the 1990s, it was extended again, when architects Gerard Kennedy and John Hegarty did separate commissions.
It is hard to find a flaw with this highly desirable Cork house, apart from the fact that only one individual or family is going to end up living here.
Tom Woodward has the sale of Sunville. He has the pleasure of leading viewings, and heāll have to sort out the final bids and console distraught under-bidders - of which thereāll be many.
He guides it at ā¬1.8 million - surely on the low side given its rarity, strong architectural forms, location and condition.
It has had all the hard work done to it, painstakingly so. It has been structurally secured, re-roofed with slate, its sash windows have been restored, Ventrolla-ed and replaced with matching windows where required. It has damp proofing and is reassuringly dry, is heated by a zoned heating system with original fireplaces as a more than a decorative back-up, and the decor is assured and appropriate to each room and sectionās period.
Woodwardās sales brochure says Sunville is āone of the finest residences to be offered for sale in Cork for some time.ā If they have used the phrase before (and they have) it is earned here.
Sunvilleās discrete glories start from the electronically/intercom controlled access gate and continue as you pass through the timeless parterre garden and flagstone entrance buffer before getting to the fan-lit front door and sheltering porch.
The houseās mid-level reception rooms are timepieces with appealing architectural detailing, such as cornice work, fireplaces, architraves, even down to door handles and brass catches.
Windows here are lofty, tall enough to get through if necessary to access the ornamental wrought iron balcony beyond. The balcony also has full access points from the sun room and kitchen; it is a great party circulation area.
The kitchen is a modern bright space with light-wells in the ceiling, units and island in pale maple with a contrasting red-painted larder press, and oak floor.
The lower level (with under-floor heating) is most modern of all, done up as a series of home offices but in reality, a multi-use space, with patio access and independent as well as internal access. Thereās also a very large 28ft by 24ft games room, with enough space for both a full-size snooker table and tennis table, store rooms and service rooms to hold the central vacuum system and heating boiler. The houseās early 1800s antiquity is recalled by the domed coal stores and wine cellars serving the basement.
The terraced gardens with a southerly aspect are magnificent, with lawns, old sandstone walling, pedestrian access to Summerhill north, and trees include weeping ash, magnolia, laburnum and fig.
The accommodation space lessens as you rise through the house, so the top floor has four bedrooms in all. The master bedroom is the best of the bunch, and the main bathroom has a cast iron bath long enough to swim in. Whoever gets their hands on Sunville can consider it for their next stroke.



