See the light in this Zen-like Sandymount cottage for €750k

Fully renovated three-bed home by railway line is designed around a peaceful courtyard

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Address: 5 Railway Cottages, Sandymount, Dublin 4
Price: €750,000
Agent: Lisney
View this property on MyHome.ie

When Deirdre and Ivan Coonan were looking for a house in 2007, they "wanted a project – we didn't want a house that was done," says Deirdre. And that's exactly what they got when they bought a house needing complete refurbishment off Serpentine Avenue in Sandymount at auction in March that year. They paid €570,000 for 5 Railway Cottages, a single-storey semi-detached two-bed cottage built around the early 1900s with a long back garden. Railway Cottages is a narrow road that runs parallel to the Dart line.

Over the next three years, the couple, both engineers, and their architect Mary Laheen completely revamped and extended the cottage, designing a bright modern three-bed with an internal courtyard garden behind the original stone exterior. But with two children, they need a larger garden where their football-obsessed son can play: Lisney is selling 5 Railway Cottages, Sandymount, Dublin 4, now a 127sq m (1,367sq ft) three-bed for €750,000.

Number 5 is still single-storey but much larger than the original house, which had only a “livingroom, bedroom and rear bedroom/kitchen” as the 2007 brochure described it. The revamped cottage has a smart and unusual layout where most of the rooms open into the internal courtyard which is laid out with patios, a lawn and a rockery. It’s private, sheltered and gets the sun all day, says Deirdre.

Streamlined

A tall gate opens from the road into a narrow entrance courtyard paved with flagstones. Inside, on the right of the front hall, is the large open-plan kitchen/livingroom/diningroom floored, like the hall, with glossy white tiles.

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The streamlined Leicht German kitchen is one of Deirdre’s favourite parts of the house, designed to make everything easy to hand. An island unit with a butcher block worktop marks the separation of the kitchen and living area: a recessed panel above it has downlighters. Two French doors open on either side of a fireplace - with its wood-effect gas fire – into the courtyard. The two double-glazed windows in the kitchen/dining space which look directly onto the road are frosted for privacy.

A long hall with a wall of floor-to-ceiling glass doors opening into the courtyard runs from the front to the back of the house: one of the three bedrooms has French doors to a small courtyard at the very back of the house; the other two double bedrooms open into the main courtyard. The main bedroom has an ensuite with a shower floored with mosaic tiles and a roof light as well as a good-sized walk-in dressingroom. The family bathroom also has a mosaic tiled floor and very high electrically-controlled windows.

A washer and dryer are concealed behind double doors in a large closet at the end of the hall. The house has underfloor heating, a heat recovery system and a B3 energy rating. It also has an electric vehicle charging point at the front. Parking is on street.

There’s pedestrian access from here to Lansdowne Dart station, which is a little bit closer than the Sandymount Dart on Serpentine Avenue.

Number 4 Railway Cottages, which also had a major revamp, sold in 2016 for €642,600.

Frances O'Rourke

Frances O'Rourke

Frances O'Rourke, a contributor to The Irish Times, writes about homes and property