1845 – Church of The Navity, Chapelizod, Co. Dublin
Built in 1845 and only costing £2,500,
Built in 1845 and only costing £2,500,
Detached four-bay single-storey former place of worship, c.1845, with projecting entrance porch to west gable.
The church of St. John the Baptist was designed by Patrick Byrne in 1842 following a plan by A.W.N.
A handsome Tudor Revival station building, typical of mid nineteenth-century railway architecture,
A small railway station on the branch line from the main Belfast-Dublin line to Howth.
An historic site with various architectural layers from the early 9th century,
Tudor-style house built in a robust asymmetrical design overlooking Dublin bay.
This permanent lighthouse and dwelling was designed by Chief Engineer with the Ballast Board,
Demolished railway station constructed for the Midland Great Western Railway Company.
Work began in 1844 on the foundations of Saggart church, the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.