1807 – The Guardroom, Military Barracks, Ballincollig, Co. Cork
Designs for proposed artillery establishment or ordnance depot comprising officers’ and non-commissioned officers’ quarters, messroom, cookhouses,
Designs for proposed artillery establishment or ordnance depot comprising officers’ and non-commissioned officers’ quarters, messroom, cookhouses,
Cecil Manor was described as ‘rather forbidding and architecturally uninteresting’ with wide set windows in large solid expanses of wall underneath an overhanging roof with a bracket cornice.
“This church, which is to be opened on next Sunday, is built in the form of a Latin cross,
It requires the greatest call on Christian charity to have to fight for a building with those officials of Departments of State who are merely administrators of a branch of fluctuating government power and who yet impose their personal whims on permanent buildings.(Michael Scott,
Completed in 1877, this remote church was designed by architect Timothy Hevey and built by James McAdorey from Belfast,
During the 1960s, new departure gate piers were added adjacent to the original Dublin airport terminal of 1939 to cope with larger aircraft.
Originally constructed by 1837 and rebuilt to the original plans in 1841 after a fire.
Nenagh was one of the larger towns to be served by the Great Southern & Western Railway line from Limerick to Ballybrophy.
A 36-room, two-storey, symmetrical, stucco-faced house of with several curved bows. It had a balustraded parapet to the roof, a veranda with slender iron uprights and a balcony above along the centre of the front.
The Erne Hydro Electric Scheme utilises the natural drop of 45m between the two power stations at Cliff and Cathleen’s Fall on the River Erne to form the basis for the third-largest hydro operation in the country.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.