1922 – No.1 Lower O’Connell Street, Dublin
On the corner of O’Connell Street and Eden Quay, the Irish Nationwide building is a large commercial building more noticeable for its signage than its architecture.
On the corner of O’Connell Street and Eden Quay, the Irish Nationwide building is a large commercial building more noticeable for its signage than its architecture.
Decorative upper floors above a shop unit on Henry Street – rebuilt post the 1916 Easter Rising. Finished in red and yellow brick with terracotta detailing.One of the more flamboyant rebuilds,
A proposal for a new National Theatre at the top of Parnell Square,
Sketch design proposal for urban housing to meet the needs of the new nation within a redesigned Dublin.
Bank dating from the early twentieth century constructed in a restrained classical style for the Provincial Bank.
Former monument on Leinster Lawn, commemorating three of the founding figures of Irish independence, Arthur Griffith,
Image courtesy Irish Architectural Archive. Munden and Purcell collection, ref no.
Former cigarette factory for John Player Ltd., designed by an English architectural partnership of Hepworth &
Formerly Hyam’s Building. Hyam’s were a mens outfitters / tailors who also had a store in Edinburgh which went into bankruptcy in 1934.
The rebuilding of Lower Sackville Street was almost complete after the destruction of 1916 when civil war broke out in 1922.
NOTE: Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - this will only display location of buildings on this page.