1857 – Thomas Moore Statue, College St., Dublin
At the junction of College Street and Westmoreland Street, once stranded on a traffic island with a disused public toilet (now removed) is this statue to the Irish bard Thomas Moore.
At the junction of College Street and Westmoreland Street, once stranded on a traffic island with a disused public toilet (now removed) is this statue to the Irish bard Thomas Moore.
Imposing and extravagant cavalry barracks, completed 1891 as Marlborough Barracks. Plans prepared by Royal Engineers Dept,
Mulligan’s pub was founded in 1782 and retains much of its original character with its low ceiling and wooden bar. Due to its proximity to the former Irish Press offices,
Inchicore Works is the headquarters for Mechanical Engineering and Rolling Stock maintenance in Irish Rail. Established in 1846, it is the largest engineering complex of its kind in Ireland with a site area of 73 acres,
Designed by John Chaloner Smith, engineer to the Dublin, Wicklow and Wexford Railway,
A good example of Jacobean Revival architecture, comprising a two storey central block and two single storey wings.
Constructed in the new planned town of Craigavon in the 1970s, this is a good example of the brutalist architecture of the period.
The Carlton Club on Pall Mall in London had invited various architects, including Pugin, Wyatt,
Originally built in 1185, the church was rebuilt in its present form in the 18th century by John Smyth (or Smith).
Predating London’s Nelson Column by almost 30 years, Nelson’s Pillar was a 36.8m tall column with a 3.9m tall statue by Thomas Kirk in Portland Stone at the top.
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