1883 – Proposal for Belfast Central Library
Second placed design in architecture competition to design new Central Library for Belfast.
Second placed design in architecture competition to design new Central Library for Belfast.
An unsuccessful entry in the competition to design a new Central Library on Belfast on Royal Avenue.
Unsuccessful entry in 1883 competition to design a new central library for Belfast.
Now known as Eagle Chambers, a three-storey stucco building with curved facade into North Street.
Vast flour mills owned by Barney Hughes,
`The new premises, the subject of our illustration,
Demolished 1975.
Described in detail in The Irish Builder,
Constructed between 1882 and 1884, designed by architect Thomas Jackson in the Italianate style – a four-storey building with round headed dormers and a rounded corner to Rosemary Street.
Designed by Young & Mackenzie and built in two phases for J.
In 1880, a a group of Ulster Liberals debated whether the cause of the Liberal Party should be advanced by formation of a Club in Belfast similar to the Reform Club in Manchester.