1864 – Tinode House, Blessington, Co. Wicklow
Tinode House was burned to the ground in 1922 by the IRA, and has since been partially rebuilt.
Tinode House was burned to the ground in 1922 by the IRA, and has since been partially rebuilt.
The architect Henry Hill worked for the local landowners, the Shuldhams, on the construction of the Church of Ireland nearby, but there is no definitive proof that he worked for them at their home or the lovely gate lodge,
A Victorian Scots Baronial-style house dating back to around 1865, and built of Portland stone and Scrabo sandstone.
Kylemore Abbey, now the home of Benedictine nuns, stands at the edge of the lake surrounded by woodlands.
Redburn House was designed by the architects Lanyon, Lynn and Lanyon and built for Robert Grimshaw Dunville and his wife Jeannie in 1865.
In 1809 work was started to rebuild a large Plantation castle to the designs of John Nash –
Constructed for Edmond de la Poer, whose family has held land here from Norman times.
Never constructed on the site intended for it, opposite the old church of St. Conall on which Hevey also worked.
The original core of the house was built in 1798 by Thomas Benjamin Adair, but heavily remodelled in 1866, when it was extended and crenellated.
Courtown House, near Gorey, was the seat of the Earls of Courtown. It was significantly altered and enlarged during the 19th century,