1844 – Court House, Balbriggan, Co. Dublin
Fine small stone courthouse with courtroom lit by three round-headed windows.
Fine small stone courthouse with courtroom lit by three round-headed windows.
Detached four-bay single-storey former place of worship, c.1845, with projecting entrance porch to west gable. In use as courthouse to 1970,
A small railway station on the branch line from the main Belfast-Dublin line to Howth. A very simple platform with a cantilevered canopy featuring decorative roundels with the intertwined initials of the Great Northern Railway company who ran this line.
An historic site with various architectural layers from the early 9th century, incorporated into a 15th century tower, and a later church.
Demolished railway station constructed for the Midland Great Western Railway Company. Similar in design to station at Lucan North.
Former 19th century hotel overlooking the sea near Howth. The site is now an apartment complex known as Howth Lodge. Originally the complex was a residence for the Viceroy to take the sea air during the summer,
An austere Gothic revival church with a fine spire and entrance doorway. The church spire was not added until 1901 by G.C.
A fine little house sited beside the railway station and built for the Station Master. Similar to others built for the Great Northern Railway in other locations.
Proposed design for a new Station Building for the Dublin and Drogheda Railway at Malahide in the early 1850s.
Railway stations on this line to Belfast (Dublin Connolly, Malahide, Drogheda, Dundalk) are of a high quality with good quality ironwork and brick buildings.