1684 – St. Bride’s Church, Bride St., Dublin
A former Church of Ireland at the corner of Bride Street and Bride’s Alley (now Bride Road),
A former Church of Ireland at the corner of Bride Street and Bride’s Alley (now Bride Road),
A proposal from 1685 for a large star fort covering a good portion of what is now considered the Georgian core of the south city centre.
This structure dates from 1685-86 and was built on the site of an earlier structure founded by the Danes in 1095.
Richhill Castle is a 17th-century Grade A listed country house in the large village of Richhill.
Barrack Bridge was originally a wooden structure built in 1670, and was the second bridge across the river Liffey.
The Blacker family, founded an estate at Carrick, on the Portadown–Gilford road.
Built to replace the Exchange of 1622,
Built c.1695 as a two-storey block with wings for Colonel John Allen (later 1st Viscount Allen) in place of an original fortified manor house.
In 1697, Thomas Action II tore down the ruins of Kilmacurragh abbey ruins and used its stone to build a Queen Anne house designed by Sir William Robinson.
Illustration of the original west front of Trinity College, as illustrated in Charles Brookings map of 1728.