1906 – Prince Edward Building, Regina, Saskatchewan
Built as the Regina Post Office, Chief architect David Ewart designed the original northern section of this Tyndall-faced building for the Dominion of Canada in the Beaux Arts style.
Built as the Regina Post Office, Chief architect David Ewart designed the original northern section of this Tyndall-faced building for the Dominion of Canada in the Beaux Arts style.
A Nep-classical bank branch beneath commercial office space. Largely gutted so that only the facade is worthy of architectural note.
Like the nearby School of Botany, this building was the gift of the Earl of Iveagh.
A fine convent chapel by William A. Scott, who also designed the townhall in Enniskillen.
Talbot’s Inch was designed as a ‘model village’ and built to a master plan devised by William Alphonsus Scott in the fashionable Arts-and-Crafts style of the period.
Dispensary and residence designed by Moynan & Gill, architects of Nenagh. Published in The Irish Builder and Engineer,
Library funded by donation from Andrew Carnegie, and constructed after an architectural competition. Sheridan’s design was actually placed second by the assessor G.C.
Small residence for the curate of a rural parish in Co. Tipperary.
Small school with adjoining teacher’s residence by Nenagh-based architecture and engineering partnership.
A fine four storey red brick building with sandstone detailing including banded quoins and an interesting corner treatment.