1861 – SS. Mary and Peter’s Church, Arklow, Co. Wicklow
A fine Renaissance Revival style church of 1861 to designs by Patrick Byrne. A central bay projects slightly and rises above the cornice line to merge with a short bell tower with domed roof.
A fine Renaissance Revival style church of 1861 to designs by Patrick Byrne. A central bay projects slightly and rises above the cornice line to merge with a short bell tower with domed roof.
Built between 1841 and 1843, the Daniel Robertson-designed Whitfield Court was built for William Christmas on the footprint of a previous property.
The home of Sir Cosmo Haskard who was Governor of the Falkland Islands in the 1960s and instrumental in the island remaining under British control when the government of the day was open to turning the islands over to Argentina.
A house on site of Castle View House, constructed for Countess of Glengall. Underwhelming exercise in a Baronial style,
The demolished Lissard House was a three-storey block of late eighteenth-century construction, possibly incorporating earlier fabric dating to the turn of the eighteenth century,
An Edwardian country house with a hipped roof over a bracketed cornice, and an elaborate projecting glazed porch.
A two-storey over basement mansion, to a design originally drawn up by James Wyatt in 1772,
Formerly known as Painestown, Oak Park is a large Victorian house by William Vitruvius Morrison.
Ballin Temple was a fine three-storey Georgian house with a five-bay entrance front. The centre bay was distinguished by a Venetian window and a pedimented Grecian-Doric porte-cochere.
The hydroelectric development of the River Liffey comprises three stations, Pollaphuca, Golden Falls and Leixlip, each located at a point in the river where the natural falls provide suitable sites for the stations.
NOTE: Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - this will only display location of buildings on this page.