1870 – Working Men’s Institute, Queen Street, Belfast
Constructed at the junction of Queen and Mill Streets, demolished in 1915. The arcaded shops were the home of Lennon’s Catholic Repository.
Constructed at the junction of Queen and Mill Streets, demolished in 1915. The arcaded shops were the home of Lennon’s Catholic Repository.
On the corner of Glenravel and Clifton Streets in Belfast, and constructed as a Eye, Ear, and Throat hospital, but known after its benefactors George and Edward Benn.
Substantial Victorian villa on large grounds, previously Winton House, later owned by Wesley College. Purchased just after the First World War,
Although a convent and school still exists on this site, the buildings illustrated are either gone or unrecognisable. The school was started in 1857 when they took over the house with curved bays seen in the centre of the shot.
A mid-sized Victorian house in a simple Tudor-Revival style with steep roofs and gables; and mullioned windows. It had a three-sided bow;
Building for Hugh Kerr, photographer – finished in polychrome brick with Dungiven sandstone dressings. “The materials used are Belfast red pressed bricks,
Described in The Building News with “the style adopted is Italian”. Illustration published in The Irish Builder,
Work began in 1867 on what was known as Headley Towers and also, Wynnes Folly.
Described in the Irish Builder as ‘notable for the almost total absence of any mere ornamental features’.The Londonderry Academical Institution was established by a body of influential local merchants,
“In no locality within the northern capital are architectural improvements more markedly observable than in Donegall Place.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.