1830s – Sion House, Navan, Co. Meath
Sion House was one of the residences of the Dunville family and it was used by them as a base for their pursuit of hunting.
Sion House was one of the residences of the Dunville family and it was used by them as a base for their pursuit of hunting.
This large two-storey house dates from the 18th century and was home to the Metge family, who were prominent in Navan’s commercial life in the last century.
One of a pair of similarly eccentric gate lodges built for Summerhill House. According to local legend, “An architect was asked to design two gate-lodges to be placed at the end of the avenue on either side of the main road;
Parts of the nave of the current church was constructed in 1770 on the site of an earlier church.
The mausoleum of the Taylor family built by James Franklin Fuller in 1869, is an octagonal shrine in English Gothic style,
Large 3-storey over basement Italianate house with campanile, designed by W.H. Lynn, and built of Ardbraccan limestone.
Alteration and enlargements by Trim-based architect John P. Davis. A fine shopfront with private entrance to living accommodation to one side.
Completed by June 1883, for P.J. Dunne, JP. “The entrance hall is beautifully laid out with encaustic tiles,
“The walls of superstructure are built of rubble masonry, cemented on the outside, the interior is finished in a very superior style;
Trim Workhouse was designed by George Wilkinson using one of his standard plans and was intended to hold 500 inmates.