1836 – Arc de Triomphe, Paris
50 metres high and 45 metres wide, the Arc de Triomphe sits at the junction of twelve streets as a monument to the glory of the French Army.
50 metres high and 45 metres wide, the Arc de Triomphe sits at the junction of twelve streets as a monument to the glory of the French Army.
Large branch bank for Bank of Ireland with outbuildings and living accommodation. Still in use today with extensions to the banking hall from the 1920s.
Originally a medieval house on the site was constructed in 1591, this Elizabethan or Jacobean style house was built in 1836 for the Lucas Scudamores.
Between 1826 to 1836, J. C. Buckler built a Gothic castle for Lord Stafford which was several times larger than the original Tudor hall nearby,
The old Custom House (now part of Pointe-a-Callière, the Montréal Museum of Archaeology and History) was built in 1836,
The estate has been home to two prominent Wexford families. The first owners were the Esmondes;
Still standing today, but with an altered and simplified roofline, without the grand chimneys, Gothic style pinnacles,
A previously modest Georgian house was dressed up by George Papworth in the 1830s. To the house,
Detached four-bay two-storey Tudor Revival house with half-dormer attic, c. 1840, on an asymmetrical plan with granite ashlar façade having carved stone dressings including mullioned bay and oriel windows and gables.
Fine little building with decorative pinnacles and crisp detailing. The battlemented porch with twin-light window is an especially attractive feature.