1868 – Pavilion, Victoria Wharf, Dun Laoghaire
A temporary pavilion constructed for the visit of Prince of Wales –
A temporary pavilion constructed for the visit of Prince of Wales –
During the Second World War, the grounds were used as a training area for Belgian troops.
Largely remodelled by G.C. Ashlin in the late 1860s for local MP Sir John Esmonde, and destroyed in an arson attack in March 1923 when it belonged to his son Sir Thomas Esmonde,
Built for Major-General Francis Plunkett Dunne in 1869, to a design by John McCurdy.
Dr Richard Barter’s second Turkish bath in Dublin was built as an extension at the rear of Reynold’s Hotel at 11 and 12 Upper Sackville Street.
“The altar and reredos, illustrated in our present number, are made in Caen stone, Irish and Italian marbles.
Italianate palazzo by William G. Murray on the corner of Dame and Fownes Streets. Finished in Portland stone,
Designed in a Perpendicular Gothic style, as part of a bequest as a Mariner’s Church costing 4,000 pounds.
The High School was founded in 1870 by the Governors of the Schools Founded by Erasmus Smith,
Published in The Irish Builder, March 15 1869: “Amongst the many improvements around the metropolis of the North of Ireland,