Wicklow convent on market for €775,000

52-acre package includes Georgian house, gate lodge, school house and walled gardens

Holy Faith Convent, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow, is on the market at €775,000
Holy Faith Convent, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow, is on the market at €775,000

A well-maintained convent owned by the Holy Faith Sisters in Kilcoole village, Co Wicklow, is expected to end up as a wellness-retreat centre, a hospitality facility or a trophy home when it is sold shortly by private treaty.

Mark Johnston of WK Nowlan Real Estate Advisers is guiding in excess of €775,000 for the Georgian house on 52 acres, including a gate lodge, former schoolhouse and two walled gardens, which have been owned by the religious order for 120 years.

High ceilings

Holy Faith Convent, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow, retains many original features. It is for sale at  €775,000
Holy Faith Convent, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow, retains many original features. It is for sale at €775,000
The walled garden at Holy Faith Convent, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow
The walled garden at Holy Faith Convent, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow

The five-bay house is quite manageable with a floor area extending to 345sq m (3,713sq ft) over three levels. It has many attractive period features, including decorative plasterwork, stone flooring, vaulted basements, timber sash window frames and a Venetian window directly above the front door.

A three-storey extension to the north is thought to date from the mid-19th century.

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The ground floor is dominated by a chapel with stained- glass panels, a drawingroom and a sittingroom with high ceilings and two of the many original stone fireplaces.

The basement is used mainly as a kitchen and diningroom, while the first floor is given over to seven bedrooms with stunning views over the garden and grounds.

A walled garden beside the house has been well maintained. It originally had a tennis court and fruit trees but is now largely used as a vegetable patch, fruit trees and flower beds as well as a small greenhouse.

Photographs from the 1870s record the grandeur of a second walled garden with an extensive glassed greenhouse, teahouse and ornamental bridge.

This lower garden is now overgrown but the walls and entrances remain, as does a meandering stream, the bridge base and the old teahouse, all in need of restoration.

Newton family

The original house, Darraghville, was built by

John Darragh

, a former Dublin Lord Mayor (1781-1782) on lands first leased from the Gardiner family (Earls of Blessington) who gave their name to Gardiner Street, Gardiner Square and Blessington Street.

Darragh traded in china and earthenware on Lower Ormond Quay and after his widow died in 1799, the Darraghville estate passed to the Newton family.

Jack Fagan

Jack Fagan

Jack Fagan is the former commercial-property editor of The Irish Times