1878 – Belfast Hospital for Sick Children, Queen St., Belfast
A three-storey building finished in Scrabo sandstone set back from the main building line of Queen Street.
A three-storey building finished in Scrabo sandstone set back from the main building line of Queen Street.
In the 1880s, the architect Samuel Patrick Close extended a compact Victorian villa of around 1870 into a large rambling composition in an Italianate style for Sir Hugh Houston Smiley.
Constructed in an austere Italianate style,
Built in 1785 by Matthew Fortescue for his new bride Marian McClintock.
A very long seventeen-bay two-storey house with attic, built c. 1780,
Built in 1777, it stayed with the McClintock family until the 1940s.
Constructed in 1879 to commemorate a marine tragedy of 1858.
Winning design in an architectural competition to design a hospital building for Consumptives at the Royal Hospital for Incurables in Dublin.
Large back office building constructed in the gardens to the rear of the Electricity Supply Board (ESB) buildings on Fitzwilliam Street.
Formerly known as Fortwilliam and Macrory Presbyterian Church.