Ecumenical blend of classic and contemporary at Cork's €1.45m Church Hill Georgian gem
Blessed wooded valley setting for Church Hill's €1.45m Woodview House, guided at €1.45 million by Michael Downey of ERA Downey McCarthy
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Church Hill, Glanmire, Cork |
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€1.45 million |
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Size |
310 sqm (3,340 sq ft) on 0.6 acre |
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Bedrooms |
5 |
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Bathrooms |
5 |
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BER |
E1 |
We’re talking a location at the foot of Church Hill, just under the 1780s Church of Ireland St Mary’s and All Saint parish church in Cork’s Glanmire:

these two elegant structures, one sacred, the other secular, are at the very heart of a community that started with 19th century gentrification, and today is a fast-growing city suburb of over 10,000 souls, in a folded green and wooded valley setting on the tail end of the Glashaboy River.

Woodview House dates to c 1830, sort of the glory years when wealthy Cork families continued the move to villas and mansions east of the city, along the Lee, past Montenotte and Tivoli, wrapping around the hill toward the Glashaboy valley and then the fledgling Glanmire settlement, as it added more wealth through a variety of substantial milling enterprises: Woodview followed in the 18th century steps of the even grander Ballinglanna House (1730s) and Dunkathel House (dating to the 1790s) soon to have 21st century houses snuggle up even closer to its protected curtilage.

Around the same time as Woodview was built on its sloping site, 100 metres under the landmark spire of St Mary’s, it was being joined by other substantial homes for Cork’s gentry and merchant classes, such as Lota Lodge — now the Vienna Woods Hotel — Lauristan, Glanmire House (now Colaiste an Phiarsaigh) and Janeville, now Glenmervyn House with its trio of nearby old, latticed windowed almshouses.

They are selling with a move in mind and in charge of the sale is Michael Downey of ERA Downey McCarthy, who guides from €1.45m.

In terms of quality, accommodation, finish, features and feel, as well as its stand-out gardens, privacy and security, it’s possibly the best Cork family house offer of the year. It’s going to top the wish-list of local and wider Cork hinterland families of means looking to trade up to a prize property, as well as to relocators who’d be picking up a substantial yet manageable period home of stand-out quality.

Woodview House’s own ‘crowning’ glory is a magnificent copper beech tree on the gravel apron in front of the house’s asymmetrical façade: Gerard O’Connor reckon it’s about as old as the house itself, certainly dating to the 19th century, with its girth supporting the belief, while he says it’s in such good health because it has had the occasional, judicious care of a tree surgeon to prolong its longevity.

The O’Connors are now passing on Woodview House too in possibly the best shape it has ever been, with commensurate gardens of 0.6 of an acre, after a series of upgrades, and period-appropriate extensions by O’Shea Builders, overseen by Edel, with an architect’s input at the time and personal, knowing care and décor upgrades and enhancements ever since to the gleaming c 3,300 sq ft home.

Most notable addition was the current gable sunroom, some 20’ by 11’ with hand-painted floral detailing on the ceiling, overlooking the grounds, along with a rear enlarged kitchen/dining/living room, some 32’ by 17’.

This ‘heart of the house’ multi-use area, great for entertaining, has a raised glazed roof lantern in a part-vaulted ceiling with repousse metal leaf chandelier, large island/breakfast bar with underset microwave, there’s a broad, black Aga range, and a wide ceramic Belfast sink, with square bay window plus glazed door access to very sheltered courtyard garden, with sunken pond and water feature.


One of Woodview’s most elegant features is a distinctive cantilevered staircase, up to a bifurcated split, with a double aspect master bedroom to the left, complete with fully shelved and railed dressing room/walk-in robes and large en suite private bathroom with shower.


Externally, credit is given to the landscape designers Ned Kirby and Cork’s legendary Brian Cross. Their work here, over more than a quarter of a century, plus professional visiting gardening maintenance men to keep up the exacting standards over the entire e0.6 acre of planted grounds, result in the presentation seen today, very much the complete prized property package for those with a certain wherewithal, or bank withdrawal capacity.
Woodview is very much a private remove and world away from day-to-day stresses: if next owners have to work for a living, and can remote work, there’s an option to hand with a high-quality home office with architectural elan, behind sliding timber doors and glass curtain walling by the main entrance: alongside are two othe good-sized store rooms, for bikes, golf bags and garden gear.

That office and stores set-up (with parking) is sort of set in a lower courtyard on Woodview House’s mature and well-screened grounds, bookended by not just one but two sets of electric gates, so access to visitors/clients can be controlled to work areas, whilst the family home beyond the next, higher-up gates, retains its serene privacy with secure side gate too in the high stone boundary wall to Church Hill itself for easy yet code guarded pedestrian access.




