|
Nighttown |
[D E & TG] Halfpenny Bridge Wellington Quay Custom House [U 05] River Liffey and Sir John Rogerson Quay Butt Bridge Temple Bar Bank of Ireland, Dame Street Dame Street [U 08] Front gate of Trinity College Dublin Grafton Street [U 06] O'Connell Street [U 16] Beresford Place Talbot Street [U 15 (11:25 p.m.)] Mabbot Street (now James Joyce Street) Statue of James Joyce, North Earl Street [U 06] GPO, O'Connell Street [U 08] Grand Lodge of Ireland, Molesworth Street [U 08] National Museum, Kildare Street [D TG] Shelbourne Hotel |
IMAGE |
|
|
Halfpenny Bridge | [D "An Encounter" & "Two Gallants"] Halfpenny Bridge (officially "Wellington Bridge" after the Iron Duke; designed by John Windsor) built in 1816. In the past, each pedestrian paid one old half penny to cross the bridge. Until then, no other bridge existed between Essex (Grattan or Capel Street) Bridge and Carlile (O'Connell) Bridge. | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) [D "An Encounter" & "Two Gallants"] Halfpenny Bridge (officially "Wellington Bridge" after the Iron Duke; designed by John Windsor) built in 1816. In the past, each pedestrian paid one old half penny to cross the bridge. Until then, no other bridge existed between Essex (Grattan or Capel Street) Bridge and Carlile (O'Connell) Bridge. | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) [D "An Encounter" & "Two Gallants"] Halfpenny Bridge and River Liffey | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [D "An Encounter" & "Two Gallants"] Halfpenny Bridge and River Liffey, viewed from O'Connell Bridge | |
Wellington Quay | Wellington Quay | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) Wellington Quay | |
Custom House | Custom House. Designed by James Gandon and completed in 1791. The prsent building was masterfully restored after it burned down in 1921. | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Custom House. Designed by James Gandon and completed in 1791. The prsent building was masterfully restored after it burned down in 1921. | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Custom House | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Custom House | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Custom House, viewed from Gardiner Street Lower. | |
Sir John Rogerson Quay | [U 05] River Liffey and Sir John Rogerson Quay | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 05] River Liffey and Sir John Rogerson Quay | |
Butt Bridge | Butt Bridge | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Butt Bridge | |
Temple Bar | Temple Bar | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) Temple Bar | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) Oliver St John Gogarty (pub) and Temple Bar | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) Ha'penny Bridge Inn, Temple Bar | |
Bank of Ireland | Bank of Ireland, Dame Street. 'This building was completed in 1729, during Dublin's Georgian heyday. It was home to the Irish parliament and it was from here that Henry Grattan - whose statue stands outside - declared "Ireland is now a nation": a defiant assertion of independence by the 18th-century Anglo-Irish Ascendancy. "Grattan's Parliament" was short-lived, however, and eventually forced to vote itself out of existence to endorse the Act of Union with Great Britain in 1801. The building became a bank in 1803' (quoted from Yahoo! Travel). | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) Bank of Ireland, Dame Street. 'This building was completed in 1729, during Dublin's Georgian heyday. It was home to the Irish parliament and it was from here that Henry Grattan - whose statue stands outside - declared "Ireland is now a nation": a defiant assertion of independence by the 18th-century Anglo-Irish Ascendancy. "Grattan's Parliament" was short-lived, however, and eventually forced to vote itself out of existence to endorse the Act of Union with Great Britain in 1801. The building became a bank in 1803' (quoted from Yahoo! Travel). | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Bank of Ireland, Dame Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Bank of Ireland, Dame Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Bank of Ireland, Dame Street | |
Dame Street | Dame Street | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) Dame Street | |
Trinity College Dublin | [U 08] Front gate of Trinity College Dublin | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) [U 08] Front gate of Trinity College Dublin | |
Grafton Street | Grafton Street | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) Statue of Molly Malone, the northern end of Grafton Street | |
|
(Saturday 19 June) [U 08] The northern end of Grafton Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) The southern end of Grafton Street. | |
O'Connell Street | [U 06] O'Connell Street, viewed from O'Connell Bridge | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 06] O'Connell Street, viewed from O'Connell Bridge | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 06] Statue of Daniel O'Connell, O'Connell Street Lower | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 06] O'Connell Street Lower | |
|
(Monday 21 June) The Millennium Spire and O'Connell Street Upper | |
Beresford Place | [U 16] Beresford Place | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 16] Beresford Place | |
Talbot Street | Talbot Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Talbot Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Talbot Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Talbot Street and North Earl Street | |
Mabbot Street | [U 15 (11:25 p.m.)] Mabbot Street (former Corporation Street, now James Joyce Street) entrance to Nighttown. | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 15 (11:25 p.m.)] Mabbot Street (former Corporation Street, now James Joyce Street) entrance to Nighttown. | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 15 (11:25 p.m.)] Mabbot Street (former Corporation Street, now James Joyce Street) entrance to Nighttown. | |
Statue of James Joyce | Statue of James Joyce, North Earl Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) Statue of James Joyce, North Earl Street | |
GPO | [U 06] GPO, O'Connell Street: designed by Francis Johnston and built in 1818 along O'Connell Street (formerly Sackville street), the GPO became a symbol of the 1916 Easter Rising. | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 06] GPO, O'Connell Street: designed by Francis Johnston and built in 1818 along O'Connell Street (formerly Sackville street), the GPO became a symbol of the 1916 Easter Rising. | |
|
(Monday 21 June) GPO, O'Connell Street | |
Grand Lodge of Ireland | [U 08] Grand Lodge of Ireland, Molesworth Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 08] Grand Lodge of Ireland, Molesworth Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 08] Grand Lodge of Ireland, Molesworth Street | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 08] Grand Lodge of Ireland, Molesworth Street | |
National Museum | [U 08] National Museum, Kildare Street (built in the 1880s to the design of Sir Thomas Deane) | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [U 08] National Museum, Kildare Street (built in the 1880s to the design of Sir Thomas Deane) | |
Shelbourne Hotel | [D "Two Gallants"] Shelbourne Hotel, Stephen's Green North | |
|
(Monday 21 June) [D "Two Gallants"] Shelbourne Hotel, Stephen's Green North |