1790 – Knocklofty, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary
Built for the 1st Earl of Donoughmore c.1790, it received alterations and additions in the 19th and 20th centuries in the Georgian style.
Built for the 1st Earl of Donoughmore c.1790, it received alterations and additions in the 19th and 20th centuries in the Georgian style.
The former Market house is a charming building of three blocks pyramidally arranged. The lower building houses two rectangular sections at each end,
Dr. Drummond’s Meeting-House, Second Congregation, Rosemary Street, was built 1790, and demolished 1964. It is believed that architect Francis Hiorne (1744-89) who designed St.
One of the original plots of Dame Street from when it was widened by the Wide Streets Commissioners, No. 38 also retains its original ground floor facade.
Once this waterfall on the Liffey was once one of the best known in the country, but was reduced to a trickle when the hydroelectric scheme was built in the 1940’s.
Remains of former Church of Ireland in old graveyard next to the current church. Similar to many churches across the country,
For years the only building on the short Palace Street which leads from Dame Street to the Lower Yard, Dublin Castle.
Designed by John Roberts the original structure of this church dates from the late-eighteenth century while the tympanum and other so-called embellishments were added by W.G Doolin in 1890.