1860 – Graving Dock No.1, Alexandra Basin, Dublin
A construction drawing of Graving Dock No.1, which was begun about 1853 and opened on 9 February 1860.
A construction drawing of Graving Dock No.1, which was begun about 1853 and opened on 9 February 1860.
Constructed for Cherry & Shields. Largely reconstructed by an unknown architect to house permanent exhibition of Irish manufactures for Irish Industrial Devlopment Association.
The original railway terminus for the Great Southern and Western Railway. Approached from Penrose’s Quay,
Small Gothic station constructed for the Dundalk and Enniskillen Railway Co. and which opened 26 August 1858.
Shopfront for Cherry & Shields, paper warehouse, published in The Irish Builder, December 1st 1860.
Definitely one of the more bizarre buildings to have graced Dublin. The main frontage of the Lincoln Place Baths was about 186 feet in length.
Rebuilding of a extensive furniture & upholstery establishment. Shop front of ‘novel and ornate character’.
Designed by James Franklin Fuller, built for the Bland family. The main block was of three storeys,
During the 1860s, the house was owned by Jonathan Richardson MP, who had Alfred Waterhouse rebuilt the earlier house to the style of the time.
McBirney’s Drapery Emporium which was taken over by Roches Stores in the 1940’s, but the building was burned to the ground in a disastrous fire in 1948
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.