1935 – No.177 Donegall Street, Belfast
Mid 1930s commercial building, finished in stone with a simple pediment.
Mid 1930s commercial building, finished in stone with a simple pediment.
A fine building, developed as a department store in the 1930s and opposite the Bank of Ireland,
Another 1930s cinema designed by John McBride Neill and opened during a golden period of cinema in Belfast.
Lady Brooke Bridge is a reinforced concrete structure and spans a total of 165 metres over a section of upper Lough Erne.
Still the site of a bank branch, but the previous building has been swept away.
When constructed it was the largest cinema in Northern Ireland with over 2,200 seats, 1000 of those on the massive balcony.
Designed by the foremost cinema architect in Northern Ireland, and considered his masterpiece, The Tonic was the largest Cinema in Ireland with 2,001 seats at the time.
Like many suburban cinemas in Belfast and Dublin, the Troxy incorporated some commercial units into its design.
The town Water Tower is sited on a prominent hill overlooking the town and is built of reinforced concrete.
Another Art Deco cinema designed by Belfast architect J. McBride Neill, it was finished externally in a cream faiance tiling.
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