1842 – Roxborough Castle, Moy, Co. Tyrone
Seat of the Earls of Charlemont, and originally built in the 18th Century but heavily remodelled by the second Earl in 1842,
Seat of the Earls of Charlemont, and originally built in the 18th Century but heavily remodelled by the second Earl in 1842,
A Class A listed large Tudor Revival architecture house constructed in the 1840s. It has a terraced front with octagonal pinnacles and gables at each projection of the façade,
A vast and magnificent mill complex constructed by the Herdman family, who also built the model village and their home here.
Early Ruskinian Gothic Venetian palazzo style, probably designed by W.H. Lynn. Now part of Ranfurly House,
Italianate country house designed for Thomas Adair. According to Alistair Rowan in The Buildings of Ireland: North West Ulster,
Aughentaine Castle consisted of a two-storey main block and a lower two-storey wing, with two tall Italianate campaniles of equal height,
“This building — of which we give an illustration — was consecrated on the 3rd ult by the Most Rev.
Described by Alaistar Rowan as “a large multi-gabled and aggressively picturesqe villa with decorative bargeboards,
The house was heavily remodelled and extended for George Perry McClintock. in 1862 to a design by Derry and Belfast-based architects Boyd &
Constructed by the Irish North Western Railway in 1862-63, and later extended by the Great Northern Railway which took over the INWR in 1883.
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