1780 – St. Catherine’s Church, Meath St., Dublin
“The chapel belonging to the parish formerly stood in Bridge foot street at the north side of Thomas street, but it being dilapidated,
“The chapel belonging to the parish formerly stood in Bridge foot street at the north side of Thomas street, but it being dilapidated,
Baronston also known as Baronstown, was a three-storey centre block joined to two-storey wings by curved sweeps. In 1903, a large,
After World War II, when nearby Rossmore Castle developed a severe case of dry rot, the 6th Lord Rossmore and his family were forced to leave the castle and take up residence in Camla Vale,
In 1783 the General Post Office of Dublin moved from Fownes Court to the south eastern side of College Green directly opposite the Parliament Building.
Large three bay Georgian residence with curved central entrance bay. Used as a residence for land agents for the Dartrey estate.
A very long seventeen-bay two-storey house with attic, built c. 1780, later remodelled and extended. Originally built as a Georgian house,
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,
Both ends of Lower O’Connell Street were Georgian houses, similar in design to each other, but converted to commercial use by the late 19th century.
At the lower end of Winetavern Street, demolished to make way for the Franciscan Friary at the junction with the quays.
The end of a unified Wide Street Commission terrace at the corner of Abbey Street and O’Connell Street. A fine street facade for a public house was inserted in the later 19th century,
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.