1917 – Competition Entry for NUI Senate House, Dublin
Unsuccessful entry for the National University’s proposed Headquarters at the corner of Merrion Square, Upper Mount Street and Fitzwilliam Street.
Unsuccessful entry for the National University’s proposed Headquarters at the corner of Merrion Square, Upper Mount Street and Fitzwilliam Street.
Constructed between 1914 and 1916, and one of the Pier Head’s ‘Three Graces’, the Cunard Line’s head office for 60 years from its completion in 1917 until the Company’s move to Southampton in 1967.
Rebuilt for James O’Dwyer & Co, tailors after the destruction of Henry Street in the Easter Rising.
Alex Dickson and Sons was a horticultural business supplying seeds and plants – their first Belfast branch at 55 Royal Avenue before moving to these premises in Garfield Street.
One of the chain of Mooney’s bars across the city – this was known as The Abbey Mooney.
Constructed as a cinema after the destruction of the area in the 1916 Easter Rising.
Field’s work was often in a Wrenaissance style, with influences from the Arts and Crafts movement and Richard Norman Shaw.
On the corner of O’Connell Street and Middle Abbey Street, Manfield Chambers is a commercial premises with a branch of a clothing and footwear chain on the ground level and various offices above.
The Minnesota Judicial Center, adjacent to the State Capitol, houses the state’s Supreme Court and Court of Appeals,
Reconstructed after the destruction of Henry Street in the 1916 Easter Rising. Known as Cassidy’s Public House for many years,