1775 – The Marshalsea, Dublin
Built near the rear of Bridgefoot Street and Bonham Street to replace an earlier Marshalsea between Christ Church Cathedral amd Wood Quay.
Built near the rear of Bridgefoot Street and Bonham Street to replace an earlier Marshalsea between Christ Church Cathedral amd Wood Quay.
Sited near the centre at the park, just off Chesterfield Avenue and close to àras an Uachtaráin is the residence of the ambassador of the United States of America to Ireland.
Named after Lord Simon Harcourt, the former Lord Lieutenant of Ireland from 1772-76.
The site of City Hall on Cork Hill was originally the site of Sainte Marie del Dame which came into the possession of Richard Boyle 1st Earl of Cork who built his home on the site Cork House around 1600.
Beautifully conserved early in the 21st century, this pair of large Georgian houses are part of a row of imposing townhouses.
Design for a terrace of houses on Sackville Street,
Illustration of the Theatre for Trinity College Dublin,
Before the completion of the Grand Canal Docks at Ringsend,
“The chapel belonging to the parish formerly stood in Bridge foot street at the north side of Thomas street,
One of the few remaining older buildings on this quay,