The scale of this €2.6m Cork property offers something unique
Rear view of Mike Nolan's Moneygourney family home on 2.7 acres with planning for three further houses. Agent Der Riordan of Barry Auctioneers guides at €2.6 million
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Moneygourney, Douglas, Cork |
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€2.6 million |
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Size |
384 sq m (4,130 sq ft) + 160 sqm (1,700 sq ft) apartment |
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Bedrooms |
5 + 1 - 3 |
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Bathrooms |
4 = 1 |
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BER |
B3 |
IN a property with no shortage of talking points, the most intriguing feature at this Moneygourney home is the sweeping set of steps that cuts up through landscaped banks to a small green clearing, where two sculpted eagles, wings flared and talons bared, are locked in mortal combat.

“It’s hard to let go, isn’t it?” Bill asks. “Yes it is Bill,” says Joe. “What can I tell you? That’s life,” answers Bill, in a heartfelt moment of reflection.

“I came here to plant one tree, and I’ve been here since,” Tony laughs.

The tree was a magnolia — dedicated to the memory of Grace — and it has delivered magnificent blooms year-on-year, just as Grace’s death has delivered hope to others, propelling her father into setting up a foundation in her memory in 2002, the Grace Nolan Foundation, followed by decades of raising awareness about HHT, while also raising millions of euro, through the foundation, towards the cost of researching the disorder, with the goal of finding a cure.

“We had manys the marquee,” Mike says. Drinks were served from the outdoor block-built covered bar and barbecue and guests could sit on the built-in stone seats or on the Joe Black steps or at any number of seating areas dotted about the expansive Indian sandstone patio. It was one hell of an entertainment space, but you’d expect nothing less from a man who once ran a couple of successful bars, including Oscar Madison’s in Kinsale, the Titanic in Cobh, and the well-known Oyster bar in Cork city, where he turned the upstairs room into a shrine to his hero John Lennon, before selling it in 2004 to the Rebel Group.

Much of The Beatles paraphernalia that he showcased in the Oyster is now on display in the guest house at Moneygourney, a roomy 160 sq m property, bigger than your standard semi-d. Previously a garage, it was knocked and rebuilt by Mike in 2013, the same year they decided to add a modern, zinc-clad, heavily glazed extension to the rear of the original Moneygourney house, which was built in 1995.

Among the treasures on the guest house walls are a framed cheque written by John Lennon to Harrods store in 1970; framed rare US versions of Beatles records and album sleeves; a photo of Eric Clapton and George Harrison deep in conversation, taken by their one-time girlfriend, model, and photographer Patti Boyd (there are just 50 copies of the image worldwide), and original 1974 pop art images of the Fab Four by renowned Polish artist Rafal Olbinksy, purchased by Mike on New York’s 8th Avenue many years ago.


Amid the Fab Four iconography are photos of Mike with comedian Brendan O’Carroll. They first met through a football fundraising gig (Mike played League of Ireland football with Cork Celtic, Limerick Utd and City and Cobh Ramblers) and Brendan subsequently donated the takings from the very first night of Mrs Brown’s Boys to the Grace Nolan Foundation, after the play premiered at the Everyman Palace in Cork. Mike later put in a couple of appearances in the TV show, including the 2013 Christmas special. He remains close friends with the actor who also came up with the idea for Dear Grace, a national letter-writing competition for schoolkids who composed letters to Grace. The initiative generated 10 books of Dear Grace letters over the years, with proceeds going to the foundation.

The pubs were “hobbies” for Mike whose main business was Cork-headquartered QEF Global, providers of supply chain management. In 2013, Mike sold the business in a multi-million dollar deal to Park Ohio Holdings Corp, a Nasdaq-listed company led by Ed Crawford. Crawford was appointed US ambassador to Ireland in June 2019. A photograph of Mike and Ed in his ambassadorial role hangs in the expansive hallway of the main house at Moneygourney.

Even with two substantial homes on the 2.7 acre Moneygourney site, the sheer scale of the property means they hardly make a dent on it. Both homes are at the top of a long, curving driveway with lawn on either side. You’d be inclined to think there was scope for more homes and planners were of the same mind, as permission was granted earlier this year for the construction of three, four-bed 2,800 sq ft homes on the front lawn. The planning grant and the existing two residences on the site are all factored into the €2.6m asking price.

There are copious rooms to choose from in the 4,000 sq ft-plus, five-bedroom main house, from the two reception rooms either side of the hallway (one is currently a home office) to the very generous open plan kitchen/dining/sunroom area, housed mainly in the rear extension, with doors to the patio. The extension also includes a large living room with a bar and music surround system, and an extra high ceiling and clerestory window for added light and volume. The ceiling height allowed Mike to hang a piped glass chandelier that he bought in New York the day the Twin Towers came down. He bought the eagle sculpture the same day at a knockdown price from a dealer convinced the world was about to end. The eagles have remained at the top of the Joe Black steps while the rest of the gardens evolved under the expert eye and green-thumbed guidance of Tony.

It’s conceivable that whoever buys the house will want to enjoy the land as is, rather than developing it, but another buyer might like the opportunity to build in a prized location, near the South Link road network and Douglas village, atop Maryborough Hill, where homes command a premium.

“The purchaser will be a family looking for a larger property with space and character, or indeed families returning from Dublin, or coming from abroad.





