1939 – Department of Industry and Commerce, Kildare Street, Dublin
This building was the result of a competition announced in 1935 to design accommodation for new government departments.
This building was the result of a competition announced in 1935 to design accommodation for new government departments.
In November 1782,
Leinster House was designed by Richard Cassels in 1745 for the Earls of Kildare and Leinster,
Fitzwilliam Place is the continuation of Fitzwilliam Street after it passes through Fitzwilliam Square.
Fitzwilliam Street once the longest expanse of intact Georgian architecture anywhere in the world was destroyed in the 1960s when the ESB a supposedly responsible semi-state body wantonly demolished twelve of the houses.
Named after the Fitzwilliam family, Earls of Merrion, who developed this land as part of their great estate on the southside of the Liffey.
Named after the Fitzwilliam family, Earls of Merrion, who developed this land as part of their great estate on the southside of the Liffey.
One of Dublin’s most lavish late Victorian pubs,
In 1999 the city architect Jim Barrett commissioned David Mackay,
“The Sick and Indigent Roomkeepers’ Society, formed in 1790,