1860 – Drinking Fountain, Parkgate St., Dublin
Published in The Dublin Builder, February 1 1861, and gifted to the city by the Earl of Carlisle.
Published in The Dublin Builder, February 1 1861, and gifted to the city by the Earl of Carlisle.
Findlater’s was once a chain of food and wine merchants in the Dublin area. This was built as their Howth store and later became a bar as part of a local hotel complex.
A construction drawing of Graving Dock No.1, which was begun about 1853 and opened on 9 February 1860.
In November 1782, the newly formed Kildare Street Club purchased a property on Kildare Street for its new premises.
Winning entry for an architectural competition held in late 1859 to design asylum and adjoining Christ Church.
Constructed for Cherry & Shields. Largely reconstructed by an unknown architect to house permanent exhibition of Irish manufactures for Irish Industrial Devlopment Association.
A fine large commercial premises on Dame Street with decorative plasterwork. It is in effect two buildings united by stucco, with two separate doorways off-centre at ground level.
The original entrance to Prospect Cemetery, popularly known as Glasnevin, had two entrance lodges. Only one of these now exists,
More expansive scheme than constructed to replace the church destroyed in a fire in 1860.
The first Dublin commission of Belfast firm Lanyon, Lynn and Lanyon, this little Italian Romanesque church replaced an earlier one of 1826.
NOTE: Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - this will only display location of buildings on this page.