1798 – Richmond Lodge, Knocknagoney, Co. Down
Richmond Lodge was a substantial mansion built c.1798 and later extended in the Victorian era, on the site of which now stands the Knocknagoney housing estate.
Richmond Lodge was a substantial mansion built c.1798 and later extended in the Victorian era, on the site of which now stands the Knocknagoney housing estate.
During the Second World War, materials for new construction was sometimes scarce but Great Northern Railways saw fit to create this new buffet restaurant within their Dublin terminus.
Originally used during the summer by the Central Mission (Methodist Church) of Middle Abbey Street in Dublin as a summer Holiday retreat.
A Georgian house for Arthur Hill, later Viscount Dungannon, which was added to the North end of an earlier house.
Ardfry was designed as a two-storey house with nine bays but was later renovated in 1826 to include gothic features and became adjoined to an earlier medieval castle on the lands.
Christ Church was designed by Joseph Welland, architect to the Board of First Fruits and subsequently to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners,
The Foundation Stone of the Church was laid on 26 August 1865 by James Sherman Crawford,
The gate lodge of Northland House is all that survives today of the ancestral home of the Earls of Ranfurly in Dungannon.
John Grubb Richardson had been responsible for building the nearby village of Bessbrook. He acquired Mount Caulfield,
An obelisk of hammered granite with dressed angles standing on a base reached by three steps.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.