A timber-framed dwelling, Monkton is located at the northern end of Ardoyne Road at Corinda. It has a symmetrical front comprising double street-facing
gables either side of a projecting
porch. Bay windows are located in the walls on each side of the porch. The main roof of the house is
hipped and the external walls are clad with
weatherboards. The front of the house sits at ground level and the protruding front porch is accessed by a single concrete step. The porch has double tapered posts above sill height with
Georgian style mouldings supporting thick
verandah plates above. Weatherboard-clad
piers rise at each corner with thick sills from which extend the
verandah posts.
Lattice infill panels are fixed in between the posts below arched valences. The main roof is clad in
Marseilles pattern terracotta tiles. Gabled
fascias are narrow in width and are formed from moulded timber. The
chimney has a flat cap and two flue openings and is finished with rough cast render which is painted. It has lead flashing to the tiles.
Soffits to the main roof are supported by long shaped soffit
brackets and are lined with spaced pine
battens. The low pitched roofs to the
bay windows and porches are clad in roll-and-pan profile galvanised iron sheeting. All gutters are quad profile. Soffits to the porches and bay windows are supported on small shaped soffit brackets and are lined with
fibre cement sheeting. Each of the gables to the street is formed with fibre cement sheeting with vertical batten cover strips. In the centre of each
gable is a lattice-formed roof ventilation grill. The side porch has similar details to front porch but has timber slatted
balustrades. A recent landing and timber framed
stairs have been added to the side porch. The bay windows to the street and to the south have
casement windows with a central fixed
bay with curved glazing bars. The bay window to the north-west has casement windows only. All other windows in the house are multi-paned timber casement windows. Porthole windows are located on the front porch, north elevation and south elevations of the house. External doors to the house (located at the side porch and on the front porch) are panelled timber doors with multi-paned glazing at the top.
French doors open onto the front porch. The house becomes high-set at the rear where the land slopes down to a levelled yard. It is supported on brick piers at the rear and the under-storey area is open. The house consists of two bedrooms (a main bedroom in the south-east corner and a second bedroom to the south), a sleep-out known as "the new room" (c.1930s-1940s) to the west, a kitchen in the north-east corner, two bathrooms, a hall, a sitting room and a parlour. A side porch off the kitchen provides access to the lower garden to the north via recent stairs. The front porch provides entry to the parlour which features built-in early cabinets with
leadlight glazed doors and recessed bookcases surrounding a face-brick fireplace with concrete hearth. The fireplace projects into the adjacent kitchen where the surface is smooth rendered and painted. The sitting room features a bay window overlooking the river to the north-west, with a built-in solid timber window seat. Walls are lined with clear-finished timber v-jointed boards to
picture rail height. Clear-finished timber panelled doors with cathedral patterned glazing provide access to the hall from the sitting room. A pair of bi-folding doors provides access to the new room to the west. Early built-in joinery cabinets are located throughout the house including a linen press extending to the ceiling in the hallway, a former servery, cupboards and a pantry/broom cupboard extending to the ceiling in the kitchen, a wardrobe with storage cupboards extending to the ceiling in the main bedroom and a cupboard in the parlour. All rooms have walls lined with v-jointed boards and ceilings of fibre-cement with cover strips. The main bedroom, parlour and sitting room have plaque rails and
cornices are of a similar design. Other rooms have simpler picture rails.
Skirtings are clear-finished timber in the parlour, sitting room, new room and main bedroom with simpler beaded skirtings in other rooms. Floors throughout the house are hardwood except for the hall and the second bedroom, which are pine. The floor to the kitchen is finished with recent ceramic tiles. The flooring in the bathroom to the west is green
terrazzo with a black terrazzo border. Many early light fittings and
bakelite powerpoints and light switches remain throughout the house. Additions to the place include a security
grille to the front porch, some new kitchen cabinets, a bookcase in the hall and new bathroom fixtures. Recent leadlight windows are located in the internal bathroom. Other structures on the site include a recent
carport on the street boundary to the south-east, a
shed to the south, a recent pool fence and a recent rainwater tank in the south-west corner. A recent shade structure is located over the
driveway immediately in front of the house. These other structures are not considered of cultural heritage significance. An early concrete fish pond sits within the pool fence at the rear of the house. There are views from the rear of the property along the Brisbane River to the west towards
Seventeen Mile Rocks and across to Fig Tree Pocket. Mature trees provide a foreground to the house along Ardoyne Road and a mature
jacaranda shades the garden to the south-west. There are several garden beds and other plantings throughout the garden. == Heritage listing ==