1998 – Herbert Park Hotel, Anglesea Road, Dublin
A fairly bland hotel architecturally with a large bedroom block running towards an entrance of the Herbert Park.
A fairly bland hotel architecturally with a large bedroom block running towards an entrance of the Herbert Park.
With the nearby hotel and apartment block, this constitutes the old Johnston Mooney & O’Brien bakery site,
A graceful little library with a rather unfortunate porch attached. This small brick library just off Merrion Road and surrounded by RDS property has an interesting central bay.
This is the oldest standing bridge spanning the Liffey. Started in 1764 and completed in 1768, it was originally known as Queen’s Bridge after Charlotte of Mecklenburg,
Originally designed and built by James Gandon, O’Connell Bridge was built in 1794-98 and named after the then Viceroy –
A three-arched bridge built of granite, with cast-iron balustrades, built in 1813 and opened in 1816.
Accepted as the symbol of Dublin, the Ha’penny Bridge (originally Wellington Bridge after the ‘Iron Duke’; offically Liffey Bridge) was opened in 1816.
Originally the site of the only bridge crossing the Liffey until 1674, Fr Mathew Bridge is named after a proponent of abstinence from alcohol.
Once virtually unused since the opening of a new bridge beside it to cope with the heavy traffic,
Opened in 1861, Rory O’More Bridge is named after one of the ringleaders of a plot to capture Dublin in October 1641.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.