1760s – Royal Irish Academy, No.107 Grafton Street, Dublin
Early home of the Royal Irish Academy, which had some minor work by Richard Johnston, and internal stuccowork by Charles Thorp.
Early home of the Royal Irish Academy, which had some minor work by Richard Johnston, and internal stuccowork by Charles Thorp.
Equestrian statue of George II, erected 7 July and unveiled 16 July 1761.
Construction started in 1758 and took four years to complete. Based on Palladio’s church of the Rendentore at Venice.
John’s Bridge, which connects John’s Street with the rest of the city, was originally built after 1200 and was destroyed by the great floods of 1487 and 1763 and subsequently rebuilt each time.
Remodeling of house for Rt. Hon. Hercules Langford Rowley. Demolished 1931. The house was purchased by Rowley in 1743,
Built in 1765 by the Rev James Lowry, Rector of Clougherny. The entrance front had a central, three-sided bow, one bay on either side of it.
Stuart Hall was built in the 1760s for Baron Stuart, later Viscount Castle Stuart. It was originally a three-storey Georgian house,
The first home of the Dublin Society (later the Royal Dublin Society) on Grafton Street. The architect Thomas Ivory was commissioned to design the museum inside the building,
The Great South Wall on which Poolbeg Lighthouse stands, extends from Ringsend over 4km out to sea.
A church with a 12th century foundation, rebuilt several times, notably in 1681. In the mid 18th-century a committee was formed to raise funds for yet another renovation of the church.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.