
| Introduction | Chimneys | Roof | Doors and windows | Walls | Back to main menu | Forum |
|
The Inishowen Peninsula Inishowen is
a peninsula in north east County Donegal. At its northernmost tip is located
Malin Head, the most northerly point of the island of Ireland. Much of
Donegal has experienced tourism which in recent years has led to increased
change of the built environment, particularly associated with the building
of second homes for tourists. Some parts of County Donegal, particularly
around Port na Blagh and Dunfanaghy, have experienced substantial change
in the last decade. Inishowen has not been immune from these pressures,
but much of the tourist force has passed it by as tourists often bypass
the peninsula to travel further west. Perhaps as a consequence of having
escaped much of the pressure for second homes and other tourist developments,
much of Inishowens stock of vernacular housing remains. Here we will examine some of the house types found on the peninsula. These will generally be rural housing of traditional type, constructed within culturally defined limits limits which have now been abandoned in modern house building. Vernacular architecture can be distinguished from formal architecture. As Alan Gailey notes in Rural Houses of the North of Ireland (1984, John Donald Publishers Ltd., Edinburgh) formal architecture was
Traditional houses were built according to certain norms which changed only slowly within society and thus a vernacular architecture would develop. Often the type of housing the internal arrangements of a dwelling and its method of construction would not change, even if for example the housing materials available were to change. Early vernacular housing used locally available materials for walling and roofing materials, but imports of timber, imported slates and tiles, bricks and concrete became more common in the mid 19th Century. However, in the North of Ireland it was the 20th Century before the vernacular house began to be replaced with housing which owed nothing to local tradition. |
| Home |