1906 – Belfast City Hall
In 1888 Queen Victoria gave the town of Belfast the status of City. In response the citizens built the magnificent City Hall which today dominates the heart of Belfast.
In 1888 Queen Victoria gave the town of Belfast the status of City. In response the citizens built the magnificent City Hall which today dominates the heart of Belfast.
Sculpted by Frederick Pomeroy and assisted by Sir Alfred Thomas Brumwell,
A fine four storey red brick building with sandstone detailing including banded quoins and an interesting corner treatment.
A monumental building with a triumphant Ionic order and smaller version of the City Hall corner towers.
William Martin Ashmore was an English architect from Derbyshire. He won the first prize in Class I,
Constructed as the porter’s gatelodge for university and designed in the Tudor-Revival style. A single-storey lodge was beside the tower with an octagonal,
The Royal Hippodrome Theatre was constructed beside the Grand Opera House in 1908-07. Renovated in the 1960s as a Odeon cinema when it lost much of its original architectural detail.
Built as Library House for Robert Watson & Co, a firm of cabinet makers and upholsterers.
Second placed scheme for buildings adjacent to the Lanyon Building of Queen’s.
The dock was constructed by the Belfast Harbour Commissioners and opened in 1911. It was designed to accommodate the new White Star liners Olympic and Titanic.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.