1860 – The Arcades at The Horticultural Gardens, South Kensington, London
In 1861 the Royal Horticultural Society developed a new garden at South Kensington on land leased from the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851.
In 1861 the Royal Horticultural Society developed a new garden at South Kensington on land leased from the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851.
‘The Assembly Rooms’, designed by Richard Rolt Brash c. 1860, originally known as ‘Protestant Hall’
Founded as the Free Cancer Hospital in 1851 by Dr William Marsden at 1,
Perspective View published in The Builder, July 7th 1860.
Selected design by Peck & Stephens, published in The Builder, January 14th 1860. The present Guildhall in Cambridge,
Published in The Building News, February 10, 1860. “THE Phoenix Inn, Leeds (a view of which forms our illustration this week),
A classical church with imposing tetrastyle Corinthian portico started in 1858 and opened in 1860. John Boyd was a Belfast-based architect who designed many churches and schools for the Methodists and Presbyterians in the late 1850s.
Definitely one of the more bizarre buildings to have graced Dublin. The main frontage of the Lincoln Place Baths was about 186 feet in length.
“MANY of our readers will doubtless remember that within the last two years an effort was made to raise subscriptions for the purpose of erecting a monument to the late Josiah Wedgwood,
Fantasticly ornate shop front on Dawson Street. The facade now largely defaced by the addition of metal canopies for the bar inside.