1857 – Molesworth Hall, Molesworth St., Dublin
Designed by architects Deane and Woodward, Molesworth Hall was a freestanding building built of Portland,
Designed by architects Deane and Woodward, Molesworth Hall was a freestanding building built of Portland,
Dedicated in 1858 and is the second church to occupy the same site. The foundation stone of the new church was laid on 30 June 1852.
At the junction of College Street and Westmoreland Street, once stranded on a traffic island with a disused public toilet (now removed) is this statue to the Irish bard Thomas Moore.
The winning design of a competition to design a museum and lecture hall complex for Trinity in 1852,
The main facade with its three gables demonstrates the interior layout; the aisles and nave are the same width.
Built for the de Vesci family, the house is designed around the contrasting main facades –
St Saviour’s Church is perhaps the finest church by J.J McCarthy in Dublin even though it was never completed as planned.
A small Gothic fantasy chapel designed by Charles Geoghegan for the Boland family. Wonderful how the transepts merge into the chevet with a tapering tower and spire for a very dynamic Gothic building.
Like others built along the Irish coastline,
Before the formation of AIB, this was known as the Royal Bank. The exterior is fairly straight forward classicism with a good neo-classical porch added in 1850.
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