CASTLEDERG
(Ardstraw West and Castlederg)
Catholic Population: 2,930
St Patrick’s
Church, Castlederg.
St Patrick’s Church Castlederg
has been restored to life after a lapse of nearly twenty
years.
Following the deconsecration
the old church was converted to a youth club in 1978.
As a youth club it survived 20 years of the worst troubles
in Northern Ireland. A succession of bombs, aimed at
a neighbouring police station, devastated the surrounding
area had severely damaged the old building.
Emergency repairs were carried
out to the roof and windows but other problems that
led to the abandonment of the church were initially
left unattended. Wrongly bedded stones continued to
deteriorate. Faulty gutters leaked into masonry and
plaster, dry rot developed in the structural timbers,
and a lack of ventilation under the floor caused floor
joints to rot away.
Fortunately the traditional construction
proved better able to withstand blast damage than more
modern steel-framed buildings including the new church.
A survey confirmed that St. Patrick’s could be
satisfactorily restored.
The main contractor, McCann Brothers
of Omagh, have now completed the reconstruction. The
work has been helped by a grant from the Heritage Lottery
Fund. While the stone structure, including the spire,
was basically sound, hundreds of individual stones needed
to be replaced with matching stone from Scraghey quarry.
A new sacristy block and porch
have been built at the west end to replace the sacristy
on the street frontage. The new extension is faced in
rock with dressed sandstone to match the original. The
former sacristy houses a new reconciliation room and
a small working sacristy.
Damaged slating has been stripped
off. Decaying timbers have replaced and re-roofing has
allowed insulation to be installed to approved standards.
The roof has been completed on blue Penryn slates to
match the original. Cast iron rainwater goods have been
replaced in maintenance-free stove-enamelled cast aluminium.
Internally the timber floor has
been removed and a new damp-proof course has been inserted
in masonry walls. Insulated concrete floors have been
laid finished in timber boarding as originally intended
under fixed seating. Patterned encaustic tiling, styled
in 1880’s models, has been laid in isles and porches.
A new gallery has been built
to provide an additional 100 seats. The frontal of the
original gallery has been re-used in the construction.
Damaged plaster has been cut back and replaced. Areas
of viable plaster, subject to condensation and mould
growth, have been dry lined. A new low pressure hot
water and heating system has been installed. Electrical
systems have been replaced including a new sound system,
with a deaf loop laid in the concrete floor slab.
The Convent of Mercy in Strabane
has made available a wealth of stained glass together
with a fine ‘Hogan’ altarpiece. The remainder
of the sanctuary furnishing have been sourced from bits
and pieces of marble salvaged from church ‘restorations’
throughout Ireland.
Externally, paved surfaces have
been renewed in ‘antiqued’ concrete paving.
A carpark has been built and with the help of the ‘Hearth’
Housing Association, a landscaped garden will provide
a setting for weddings, Confirmation and First Communion
Photographs.
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