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Glenasmole Lodge, Castlekelly, Glenasmole, County Dublin, D24 TP86, Ireland

€3,400,000
Sherry FitzGerald, Country Homes, Farms and Estates
PROPERTY TYPE

Detached

BEDROOMS

5

SIZE

Ask agent

Description

A MAGICAL MOUNTAIN SPORTING ESTATE GLORIOUSLY POSITIONED OVERLOOKING DUBLIN CITY AND REPLETE WITH A PLEASANT PERIOD RESIDENCE, SET OUT IN THE SPORTING LODGE MANNER. THE GARDENS ARE LAID OUT IN A NATURAL STYLE APPROPRIATE TO THEIR MOUNTAIN SETTING AND ARE SHELTERED BY SUPERB SCOTS PINES, BEECHES, MOUNTAIN ASH AND RHODODENDRONS.

DESCRIPTION
Early in the 1790's George Grierson II (1763-1821) chose this remarkable setting to build a Georgian Sporting Lodge in the foothills of the Dublin Mountains, close to the source of the River Dodder, which meanders through the lands.
Glenasmole Lodge is located just over 10 miles south of Dublin City Centre, and was completed in 1792 when it was known as Heathfield Lodge. It holds a commanding and picturesque position at the head of Glenasmole Valley. For a period between 1835 and 1947 the lodge was known as Cobbe Lodge when Charles Cobbe of Newbridge House, Donabate and his family enjoyed the property as a sporting lodge, thereafter the present name has been in use.
The general area of Glenasmole, which is a tranquil valley, has always been treasured by those fortunate enough to know it, this name can be interpreted in two ways; either as the Valley of the Thrushes (Glen na Smolach) or as the Valley of the Smouldering Embers (Glen a'Smol).
It is a rare occurrence, if not a unique one, for a property with such a significant holding so close to the heart of a vibrant European Capital City to come on the market. It is ideal as a principal private residence or an easily accessible weekend retreat, with access to the M50 orbital motorway just 5.6 miles / 9 km away and Dublin International Airport at 21 miles away taking a 35 - 40 minute drive at most times.
When approaching the lodge along a winding gravelled drive it is difficult not to be struck by the beauty and west of Ireland type magic of the house and its immediate environs, a view that is immediately reinforced on arrival at the house. Pleasure grounds comprising some 34.3 acres / 13.9 hectares surround the house and compliment the wider acreage of picturesque mountainous lands that extend to in excess of 220 acres (89 Hectares). These lands blend naturally into the wider mountain landscape of commonage lands where pleasure walks and bridal paths can be enjoyed. The pleasure grounds within the estate are well timbered and include superb specimens of scots pine, beech, mountain ash and rhododendrons. The sloping nature of the grounds allows distant views out over the garden onto the heather clad mountains and over the distant waters of Glenasmole Reservoir.

HISTORY
Glenasmole Lodge is a home of immense historical significance that has been featured in a number of renowned books including The Neighbourhood of Dublin by Weston St. John Joyce - and In an Irish House edited by Sybil Connolly. In the early 1800's the original house was destroyed by fire, with nothing but the stone work remaining. The compensation George Grierson received enabled him to rebuild the house in 1812. This he did following the Regency style with plans he himself drew up, so adding the many gables and tall ornamental chimneys. His daughters, on inheritance, altered the appearance to that of a Swiss Chalet, replacing the roof slates with thatch and adding a wood carved balcony. However, the only remnant in the house today of this woodcarving has been incorporated in the fireplace of the main bedroom fireplace. Charles Cobbe replaced the thatch with natural slate during his subsequent ownership.
From the mid-1960's for nearly forty years the Judd family resided at Glenasmole Lodge and embellished many of the rooms with impressive fireplaces, plaster work and ornamental panelling rescued from Georgian houses facing demolition. The elegant light-filled interiors of the library, the bow-ended drawing room, the dining room, the two staircases and the bedrooms at Glenasmole are filled with authentic eighteenth and early nineteenth century decorations and fittings of a quality increasingly difficult to find today.

MAJESTIC LIVING
The front of the house, facing Glenasmole Valley, was improved during this time by the addition of a long and wide ornamental veranda constructed using antique cast-iron columns purchased at Crowthers in London, a firm famous for the quality of its salvaged architectural ornaments. The decorative finials on top of the veranda come originally from the front of a chemist's shop in Westmoreland Street.
On the south front an eighteenth-century doorway from a house demolished in St. Stephen's Green, acts as a garden door. It is complete with its fanlight and incorporates an unusual lantern. Inside there is a great character to the lodge and a homeliness that belies it's size. It boasts the most wonderful vistas from almost every window, either of the glorious gardens, the valley below or of the picturesque mountain behind.
A Gothic style panelled door leads into an entrance porch with ornate cornicing, parquet flooring and acanthus leaf moulding on the architraves that, in turn, lead into a stair hall, with pine timber carved staircase to the first floor and mezzanine floor. Formal reception rooms include a drawing room with a fine marble chimneypiece and a dual aspect with matching bow windows, a study again has a bow window but in addition has double French doors opening to a garden terrace. The library has a superb and large marble chimney piece, part panelled walls, bookcases with finely carved columns, an ornate Diocletian window and door to the veranda. The dining room has a carved pine chimneypiece, an ornate arch with carved pine pediment. A French door with panelled and moulded architrave with acanthus leaf motif leads from the dining room into the sunroom with it's Gothic style windows and double French doors to the garden.
On the first floor a vestibule leads to the master bedroom suite with bedroom, bathroom and dressing room and is complimented by a guest bedroom suite, again with bedroom bathroom and dressing room. There are 3 further bedroom suites making 5 in total. A secondary library staircase provides alternative access to the first floor. This naturalistic layout is typical of an Irish garden. The style is sometimes called Robinsonian after William Robinson, the native Irishman, who, in the early twentieth century, pioneered, world-wide, the idea of planting exotic trees and shrubs in a garden in such a way that they would appear 'natural' to the place.

However, a number of formal areas contrast with this general natural layout. A large paved terrace faces south, here two garden tables in early cast-concrete are exceptional. The kidney-shaped swimming pool and its pool house in Neo- Regency style have their own discreet setting. The tennis court is screened by a small arboretum of rare trees, many of them imported from the famous English nursery firm of Hillier's. A cutting garden of hybrid tea and floribunda roses flanks the farmyard.
The plants in the garden form one of the largest private collections of exotic trees and shrubs in the Dublin area. They have been carefully chosen and planted in large groups or in specific colour combinations to give abundant colour and scent during each season of the year.
In summer, eucryphias, hoherias, hydrangeas and clumps of red hot pokers flower against blue skies. The autumn brings the colourful leaves of maples, liquidambers, swamp cypresses and nyssas. In winter, flowering witch hazels can be seen from the windows of the house. Golden-variegated Irish yews and other ornamental conifers light up the driveway. A stone farmstead positioned a short distance east of the lodge comprises a number of stone outbuildings, including some stabling, and an old coach house. The Bell House is a superb opportunity for additional living space or indeed a work at home office subject to planning and is in veery good condition.
An old staff cottage with a belfry is now used as a dry storage area or garage. A short distance again beyond this farmstead there is a sand arena that must enjoy a setting equal if not better than any other and must make the equestrian activities all the more enjoyable. The lands immediately surrounding the house provide some useful grazing and link to the remaining lands, which are largely of mountain quality and amenity value.

Glenasmole Lodge, Castlekelly, Glenasmole, County Dublin, D24 TP86, Ireland

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Distances are straight line measurements
  • Dublin(International)
    15.0 miles
  • Waterford(International)
    78.4 miles
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About Sherry FitzGerald, Country Homes, Farms and Estates

176 Pembroke Road Ballsbridge Dublin D04 EN80

Looking at the company today and thinking back to its’ origins, it’s interesting to see how, in the 30 or so years since its formation, the business has now grown to become Ireland’s largest, fully diversified property advisory firm servicing the residential and commercial property markets. Sherry FitzGerald was founded in 1982 as a result of the amalgamation of 2 companies – FitzGerald & Partners (founded 1972) and Sherry & Sons (founded in 1949). Back in 1982 we had just one residential office on Merrion Row in Dublin 2 with a second office in Terenure not opening until 1989.

Despite the economic difficulties of the 1980’s, the company recruited for the future by forming a team of young property professionals who shared a common vision of a new type of auctioneering company. From the start, we practiced a strong gender balance philosophy, a philosophy we have continued to practice to this day. We understood the absolute prerequisite to have a strong ethical foundation, combined with a sense of unparalleled customer service. That is why, back then, we introduced a non-negotiable rule of not allowing anyone in the company to buy a second-hand house off our own books, coupled with introducing opening 7 days a week into what had traditionally been a ‘9.30 – 5.30 & closed for lunch’ industry. Our strap line in those early days was ‘the new generation of estate agents’ which subsequently evolved into ‘the agent you’d recommend to a friend’.

In 1992 we were the first organisation in the history of the State, outside the Department of the Environment, to provide coherent house price information to the general public and subsequently launched our Dublin house price index in 1996. Today we employ 4 economists and, through all the challenges of the greatest property crash in Europe, we kept our commitment to research and transparent information by not only retaining this function, but by further resourcing it. Our national property index, launched in 1999, is a benchmark in terms of accurate reporting of house price trends. Every 3 months, over the last 15 years, this national index has been published without fear or favour.

In 1998 we opened our first office outside Dublin in Galway. In the same year we launched one of Ireland’s first property websites – www.sherryfitz.ie.

1998 also saw us consolidate our growing commercial presence by forming a joint venture company with the global property advisory firm DTZ Holdings – DTZ Sherry FitzGerald. Today DTZ Sherry FitzGerald is Ireland’s most successful and only nationwide commercial property advisor with offices in Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick and an associated office in Belfast.

In 1999 we launched Ireland’s first ever national property franchise organisation. Today there are 66 Sherry FitzGerald franchise offices, providing property advice in every corner of Ireland.

In the same year the Group acquired the Ross McParland New Homes business which was subsequently rebranded Sherry FitzGerald New Homes.

The new century kicked off with the acquisition of Cork’s leading residential estate agency, Burton Crowley O’Flynn, later rebranded Sherry FitzGerald and now occupying a flagship office, housing both our Commercial and Residential business on Lapps Quay in the heart of Cork city.

The year 2000 also saw the launch of Mortgage Insight, later rebranded Sherry FitzGerald Financial Services, providing independent mortgage and financial advice.

In 2000 our Chief Executive, Mark FitzGerald, came up with the idea of launching a national property portal and led the process of putting together the team, the partners and the investors that made it happen, with the subsequent successful launch of MyHome.ie in 2001. MyHome.ie quickly became Ireland’s largest and most innovative property website and, 5 years after its launch, was acquired by the Irish Times.

Meanwhile, DTZ Sherry FitzGerald was growing rapidly. In 2004 the company acquired the niche commercial practice of CS Tierney O’Neill as well as further strengthening the Cork commercial business by acquiring the former Collier Jackson Stops office.

In 2005 Sherry FitzGerald successfully diversified into the U.K. market with the acquisition of the 150 year old, central and West London estate agency of Marsh & Parsons. In the following year, Marsh & Parsons acquired another London estate agency, Vanstons, which was rebranded Marsh & Parsons, and in the subsequent 5 years we grew this network to 14 London offices employing over 200 people. In 2011 we successfully sold the Marsh & Parsons business leaving the business debt free.

The timing of the Marsh & Parsons acquisition also helped to protect the Sherry FitzGerald parent business during the depths of the property crash, enabling us to keep all our own offices open and 200 people directly employed. This made us the largest Irish property business to emerge from the crash.

In 2006 we launched two community initiatives supported by the Sherry FitzGerald Foundation. Firstly, the "Your Home Away From Home" which saw us underwrite the purchase of 5 Fontenoy Street, Phibsboro for Temple Street Children´s Hospital to use as parents’ accommodation for two families 365 days a year. We subsequently arranged two successful 10km Walkathons to raise funds for the project. Secondly, we were instrumental in the establishment of Amawele - a new national charity which now twins 85 schools in Ireland with schools in the Eastern and West Cape of South Africa.

In 2008 we were chosen by Christie’s International Real Estate to be their exclusive affiliate in Ireland. This partnership gives sellers of prestige homes in Ireland access to international markets. Likewise we can also offer the owners of luxury property abroad access to local expertise when they come to sell, via the global Christie’s International Real Estate network.

In 2013, we acquired our two residential franchise offices in Galway and Limerick and opened our first Blackrock office in 2014. Since its foundation in August 1982, the Sherry FitzGerald Group has grown from a small fledgling company in one location to a nationwide, diversified business operating in 88 different locations. Currently we employ 315 people directly in our 22 owned offices across a diversified residential and commercial property business (18 residential, 4 commercial), alongside our franchise business with an additional 69 offices throughout Ireland, separately employing over 200 people. Sherry FitzGerald Group remains an Irish privately owned business and committed to leading the marketplace as we have done over the last 32 years.

Notes

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This is a property advertisement provided and maintained by Sherry FitzGerald, Country Homes, Farms and Estates (reference 138851_CHF200106) and does not constitute property particulars. Whilst we require advertisers to act with best practice and provide accurate information, we can only publish advertisements in good faith and have not verified any claims or statements or inspected any of the properties, locations or opportunities promoted. Rightmove does not own or control and is not responsible for the properties, opportunities, website content, products or services provided or promoted by third parties and makes no warranties or representations as to the accuracy, completeness, legality, performance or suitability of any of the foregoing. We therefore accept no liability arising from any reliance made by any reader or person to whom this information is made available to. You must perform your own research and seek independent professional advice before making any decision to purchase or invest in overseas property.

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