City centre revamp retains its safe house trapdoor

This house has had top-to-toe treatment since January – when it was bought for €825,000 – being transformed from seven bedsits to a home of tall elegance


This is a house - at Harcourt Terrace, Dublin 2 - with one of the most gracious and elegantly historical outlooks in Dublin.

Close to some of the capital's more agreeable spots – St Stephen's Green is around the corner and the Grand Canal drifts past its end – artist Sarah Purser lived in no 11, Hilton Edwards and Michael MacLiammoir in no 4 and George William Russell's Deirdre: A Legend In Three Acts was first performed in the garden of no 5 in 1901.

Built around 1860, no 17 has its own resident's tale. Bought in 1920 by Mary Flannery Woods of Cumann na mBan as a safe house for Michael Collins, a trapdoor and hiding place for guns is still extant, carefully preserved in part of a thoughtful refurbishment and soaring redesign by vendor Emmet Long.

All of the work has been done since January, when it was in seven flats.

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It was gutted to restore original rooms, ornate plastering, sash windows, doors and more. The works also saw the addition of 48sq m (516sq ft) of light-filled kitchen/ family/dining space to the rear and the reconfiguring of an inner hall to create a wetroom, intimate second diningroom (or study) and preserved location for that hiding place.

In no 17’s 190sq m (2,045sq ft) there are two reception rooms, three bedrooms (two en suite), kitchen/living/diningroom, attic conversion and family bathroom. It cost €825,000 in January and is on the market now for €1.4 million.

Long’s redesign had family life in mind and puts the open plan kitchen/living/dining area at the centre of things.

“It’s a great house, and street,” he says. “I’ve tried to complement, not change things. Everything is tall.” The glass-paned doors to the rear of the house are 12ft high and the utility room has a 16ft high ceiling.

The kitchen floor, as elsewhere, is of French oak, the ceiling has a long, lantern-like window.

A rear wall of window, with central French doors, overlooks a lawned garden and patio. (Clara Joinery in Kimmage made the doors and windows).

The diningroom/study has a cast-iron fireplace, the front drawingroom has a grander one sourced in Francis Street and a bay window.

The first-floor bedrooms have picture rails and decorative plaster and the attic has four Velux windows. There is off-street parking.