1903 – Northern Banking Co., Donegall Square, Belfast
Fine bank building with gothic detailing for the Northern Banking Co. Constructed of Yorkshire stone and brick with the basement in red granite.
Fine bank building with gothic detailing for the Northern Banking Co. Constructed of Yorkshire stone and brick with the basement in red granite.
One of the great commercial buildings on Donegall Square built between 1899-1902 in a Gothic Revival style.
Built to replace a church of the 1780s, McIntyre ‘took the design from Vincent Craig’s First Presbyterian Church at Omagh’.
A statue in marble of the late Queen in front of Belfast City Hall. The bronze supporters on the plinth represent the city’s chief industries at the turn of the century,
A triumphal arch at Wellington Place, Belfast, erected by the Linen Industry in honour of a visit by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.
Drawings published in The Building News in 1901. Buildings completed by 1903. The range consisted of 17 wards off a connecting corridor –
Constructed on a site provided by Sir Hugh .H. Smiley, who also paid for the construction of the building.
An attractive and eclective small post office building from the early twenthieth century when many similar buildings were built across the country.
Unlike many stations on the Great Northern Railway, Victoria Bridge station was of wood and not the polychromic brick used by Mills.
Unusual station layout with main building lower than the line and platforms. The last major work of Berkeley Deane Wise who retired in 1906 due to ill-health.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.