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Leinster ( LEN-stər; Irish: Laighin [ˈl̪ˠəinʲ] or Cúige Laighean [ˌkuːɟə ˈl̪ˠəinˠ]) is one of the four provinces of Ireland, in the east of Ireland.
ISO 3166-2 code: IE-L
Grafton Street (Irish: Sráid Grafton) is one of the two principal shopping streets in Dublin city centre — the other being Henry Street. It runs from St Stephen's Green in the south (at the highest point of the street) to College Green in the north (the lowest point).
The Eurovision Song Contest 1997 was the 42nd edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 3 May 1997 at the Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland, and presented by Carrie Crowley and Ronan Keating. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ), who staged the event after winning the 1996 contest for Ireland with the song "The Voice" by Eimear Quinn. The 1997 contest was the seventh – and to date last – edition to be staged in Ireland, as well as the fourth to be produced by RTÉ in five years. The Point Theatre served as the host venue for the third time, following the 1994 and 1995 contests, becoming the only venue to have been the site of three Eurovision Song Contests.
website: https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1997
The Battle of Rathmines was fought on 2 August 1649, near the modern Dublin suburb of Rathmines. Part of the Irish Confederate Wars, an associated conflict of 1638 to 1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms, it has been described as the 'decisive battle of the Engagement in Ireland.'
Baggot Street (Irish: Sráid Bhagóid) is a street in Dublin, Ireland. The street runs from Merrion Row (near St. Stephen's Green) to the northwestern end of Pembroke Road. It crosses the Grand Canal near Haddington Road. It is divided into two sections:
The Focus Theatre (Irish: An Amharclann Fócais) in Dublin, Ireland was a small theatre which for more than fifty years offered a variety of plays, from new and established writers, from its foundation in 1967 until its closure in 2012.
website: http://focustheatre.org
The Eurovision Song Contest 1971 was the 16th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 3 April 1971 at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin, Ireland, and presented by Bernadette Ní Ghallchóir. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ), who staged the event after winning the 1970 contest for Ireland with the song "All Kinds of Everything" by Dana.
website: https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1971
IDA Ireland (Irish: An Ghníomhaireacht Forbartha Tionscail) is the agency responsible for the attraction and retention of inward foreign direct investment (FDI) into Ireland. The agency was founded in 1949 as the Industrial Development Authority and placed on a statutory footing a year later. In 1969 it became a non-commercial autonomous state-sponsored body. Today it is a semi-state body that plays an important role in Ireland's relationship with foreign investors, with multinationals accounting for 10.2% of employment and 66% of Irish exports. The agency partners with investors to help them to begin or expand their operations in the Irish market. It provides funding support to research and development projects, and has a number of direct support mechanisms, including employment and training grants.
website: https://www.idaireland.com/
The Eurovision Song Contest 1988 was the 33rd edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 30 April 1988 at the RDS Simmonscourt Pavilion in Dublin, Ireland, and presented by Pat Kenny and Michelle Rocca. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ), who staged the event after winning the 1987 contest for Ireland with the song "Hold Me Now" by Johnny Logan.
website: https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1988
The Eurovision Song Contest 1995 was the 40th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 13 May 1995 at the Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland, and presented by Mary Kennedy. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ), who staged the event after winning the 1994 contest for Ireland with the song "Rock 'n' Roll Kids" by Paul Harrington and Charlie McGettigan. It was the third consecutive contest to be held in Ireland – the first and only time in the history of the event that a country has hosted three editions in a row – and the second consecutive edition to be held in the Point Theatre in Dublin.
website: https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1995
The National Wax Museum Plus is a waxworks in Dublin, Ireland. First opened in 1983 as the National Wax Museum, it was later relocated and renamed.
website: http://waxmuseumplus.ie
The Eurovision Song Contest 1994 was the 39th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 30 April 1994 at the Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland, and presented by Cynthia Ní Mhurchú and Gerry Ryan. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ), who staged the event after winning the 1993 contest for Ireland with the song "In Your Eyes" sung by Niamh Kavanagh and written by Jimmy Walsh. It was the first time that any country had hosted two successive editions of the contest, following the previous year's contest held in Millstreet.
website: https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1994
The Eurovision Song Contest 1981 was the 26th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 4 April 1981 at the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin, Ireland, and presented by Doireann Ní Bhriain. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ), who staged the event after winning the 1980 contest for Ireland with the song "What's Another Year" performed by Johnny Logan.
website: https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1981
Peacock Alley was a restaurant housed in the Fitzwilliam Hotel at St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin, County Dublin, Ireland from 1999 to 2002. Before that, its location was on Baggot Street in South William Street.
The Deerfield Residence (formerly the Chief Secretary's Lodge) is the official residence of the United States Ambassador to Ireland in the Phoenix Park in Dublin.
website: http://dublin.usembassy.gov/index/embassy-news/ambassador/ambassadors-residence2.html
Leeson Street (; Irish: Sráid Líosain) is a thoroughfare near central Dublin, Ireland.
The Russell Hotel or Hotel Russell is a defunct hotel located at 101–104 St. Stephen's Green South in Dublin, Ireland. The hotel had a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin star in 1974.
The Southside (Irish: Taobh Ó Dheas) is the part of Dublin city that lies south of the River Liffey. It is an informal but commonly used term. In comparison to the city's Northside, it has historically been regarded as wealthier and more privileged, with several notable exceptions. Malahide, one of the wealthiest areas in Ireland, is on the Northside, for example, whereas low-income districts such as Jobstown and Sallynoggin are part of the Southside.
Wood Quay (Irish: An Ché Adhmaid) is a riverside area of Dublin that was a site of Viking settlement. It is now the location of the Dublin City Council offices.
Mountjoy Square (Irish: Cearnóg Mhuinseo) is a garden square in Dublin, Ireland, on the Northside of the city just under a kilometre from the River Liffey. One of five Georgian squares in Dublin, it was planned and developed in the late 18th century by Luke Gardiner, 1st Viscount Mountjoy. It is surrounded on all sides by terraced, red-brick Georgian houses. Construction of the houses began piecemeal in 1792 and the final property was completed in 1818.
Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church is a Roman Catholic church in Dublin, Ireland maintained by the Carmelite order. The church is noted for having the relics of Saint Valentine, which were donated to the church in the 19th century by Pope Gregory XVI from their previous location in the cemetery of St. Hippolytus in Rome.
website: http://www.carmelites.ie/whitefriarstreet.html
Kildare Street (Irish: Sráid Chill Dara) is a street in Dublin, Ireland.
Number Twenty Nine: Georgian House Museum is a preserved Georgian townhouse located at 29 Fitzwilliam Street Lower near Merrion Square in Dublin, Ireland that operated as a museum until 2017. The house is furnished to show how it would have looked during the period of 1790 to 1820.
The Abbey Theatre (Irish: Amharclann na Mainistreach), also known as the National Theatre of Ireland (Irish: Amharclann Náisiúnta na hÉireann) is a theatre in Dublin, Ireland. First opening to the public on 27 December 1904, and moved from its original building after a fire in 1951, it has remained active to the present day. The Abbey was the first state-subsidized theatre in the English-speaking world; from 1925 onwards it received an annual subsidy from the Irish Free State. Since July 1966, the Abbey has been located at 26 Lower Abbey Street, Dublin 1.
Street address: 26 Lower Abbey Street, Dublin (from Wikidata)
website: http://abbeytheatre.ie/
The Adelaide Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Adelaide) was a general and teaching hospital in No 22 to 28 Peter Street, Dublin, Ireland. It was absorbed into the Tallaght Hospital in June 1998.
Amiens Street (Irish: Sráid Amiens) is a road in Dublin, Ireland, that runs from Memorial Road to North Strand.
Ailesbury Road (Bóthar Aylesbury in Irish), is a tree-lined avenue in the affluent Dublin 4 area in Dublin, Ireland. It links Sydney Parade Station on Sydney Parade Avenue and the Church of the Sacred Heart at Anglesea Road, Donnybrook. Historically, many embassies and diplomatic residences have been located on the road, including the striking residence of the French Ambassador, the embassy of the People's Republic of China, and the Japanese embassy (before it relocated to the nearby Merrion Centre).
Arbour Hill (Irish: Cnoc an Arbhair) is an area of Dublin within the inner city on the Northside of the River Liffey, in the Dublin 7 postal district. Arbour Hill, the road of the same name, runs west from Blackhall Place in Stoneybatter, and separates Collins Barracks, now hosting part of the National Museum of Ireland, to the south from Arbour Hill Prison to the north, whose graveyard includes the burial plot of the signatories of the Easter Proclamation and other leaders executed after the 1916 Rising. St Bricin's Military Hospital, formerly the King George V Hospital, is also located in Arbour Hill.
Bachelors Walk (Irish: Siúlán Bhaitsiléir) is a street and quay on the north bank of the Liffey, Dublin, Ireland. It runs between Liffey Street Lower (to the west) and O'Connell Street Lower and O'Connell Bridge (to the east). It was the setting for an eponymous TV series in the early 2000s.
Boland's Mills is a mixed-use development in Dublin, Ireland, on Ringsend Road between the inner basin of Grand Canal Dock and Barrow Street. The site includes several 19th century warehouses originally associated with Boland's Bakery. After ceasing operation as a bakery in 2001, it passed through several hands before falling into control of the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) following the 2008 financial crisis. NAMA initiated a €150 million reconstruction scheme to deliver new residences and commercial, retail, and civic spaces.
The Adelphi Cinema was a city centre film theatre on Middle Abbey Street, in Dublin, Ireland, from 1939 to 1995.
Street address: 98-101 Middle Abbey Street, Dublin 1 (from Wikidata)
Anglesea Road (Irish: Bóthar Anglesea) is a road joining Donnybrook with Ballsbridge, in Dublin, Ireland. It forms part of the R815 regional route in Southeast Dublin. The River Dodder flows near Anglesea Road and on a similar route to the road.
Belmayne (Irish: Béal Maighne) is a development of housing, and adjunct facilities, in Balgriffin, a northern outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland, commenced in 2006–2007.
The Ambassador Theatre, formerly Rotund Room, Rotunda, and Ambassador Cinema, was the longest-running cinema in Dublin, Ireland, and was operational on and off until 1999. It operated as a music venue between 2001 and 2008. As of 2024 it is used as an exhibition hall and event centre.
Street address: 165 Parnell Street, Dublin 1 (from Wikidata)
Kilbarrack (Irish: Cill Bharróg, meaning 'church of Saint Berach' or 'church of young Barra') is a residential suburb of Dublin, Ireland, running inwards from the coast, about 8 km (5.0 mi) from the city's centre. It is also a civil parish in the ancient barony of Coolock. Modern-day Kilbarrack is within the jurisdiction of Dublin City Council, with part of its old lands now in Donaghmede, and part in Bayside under Fingal County Council jurisdiction.
Balgriffin (Irish: Baile Ghrífín, meaning "Griffin's town") is a suburb of Dublin, Ireland. It lies on the administrative boundary between Dublin City and Fingal in County Dublin.
Broadstone (Irish: An Clochán Leathan) is one of the three neighbourhoods that make up present-day Phibsborough in Dublin, Ireland. The most southerly of these, it begins just two kilometres north of Father Mathew Bridge at Ormond Quay. The area is triangular, bounded by Phibsborough Road and Constitution Hill to the West, North Circular Road to the north, and Dorset Street and Bolton Street to the south-east. The postal district for the area is Dublin 7.
Whitehall (Irish: Fionnbhrú) is a Northside suburb of Dublin City, Ireland.
Artane, sometimes spelt Artaine (Irish: Ard Aidhin), historically Tartaine is a northside suburb of Dublin city, Ireland.
Harold's Cross (Irish: Cros Araild, meaning 'Harold's Cross') is an affluent urban village and inner suburb on the south side of Dublin, Ireland in the postal district D6W. The River Poddle runs through it, though largely in an underground culvert, and it holds a major cemetery, Mount Jerome, and Our Lady's Hospice.
Cabra (Irish: An Chabrach, meaning 'the poor land') is an inner suburb on the northside of Dublin city in Ireland. It is approximately 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) northwest of the city centre, in the administrative area of Dublin City Council. It was commonly known as Cabragh until the early 20th century. Largely located between the Royal Canal and the Phoenix Park, it is primarily a residential suburb, with a range of institutions and some light industry. Cabra is served by bus, tram and mainline rail; it lies across Navan Road, one of the main roads from central Dublin to the orbital motorway.
Dame Street (; Irish: Sráid an Dáma) is a large thoroughfare in Dublin, Ireland.
The River Liffey (Irish: An Life, historically An Ruirthe(a)ch) is a river in eastern Ireland that ultimately flows through the centre of Dublin to its mouth within Dublin Bay. Its major tributaries include the River Dodder, the River Poddle and the River Camac. The river supplies much of Dublin's water and supports a range of recreational activities.
Drumcondra Church of Ireland is a Church of Ireland church located in Drumcondra, Dublin, previously in the Civil Parish of Clonturk. The church and its churchyard contain memorials to a number of notable historical figures.
Dublin Molecular Medicine Centre (DMMC) was a charity set up in 2002, to create critical mass in molecular medicine research in Dublin, Ireland. Funding was provided by the Higher Education Authority.
website: http://www.molecularmedicineireland.ie/home
Eamonn Doran's (formerly known as The Rock Garden) was a bar and music venue located in Dublin's Temple Bar. The venue also had an adjacent pizza parlour which was part-owned by Huey Morgan of the Fun Lovin' Criminals.
website: http://www.dit.ie/faculties/science/
«Привидения Дублина» (англ. Dublin Ghost Bus Tour) — ночная автобусная экскурсия по Дублину, в ходе которой туристы посещают ряд исторических мест столицы Ирландии, где якобы водятся привидения. Продолжительность экскурсии составляет 2 часа 15 минут, услуга предоставляется транспортной компанией Dublin Bus.
The Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB) (Irish: An Biúró um Shócmhainní Coiriúla) is a law enforcement agency in Ireland. The CAB was established with powers to focus on the illegally acquired assets of criminals involved in serious crime. The aims of the CAB are to identify the criminally acquired assets of persons and to take the appropriate action to deny such people these assets. This action is taken particularly through the application of the Proceeds of Crime Act 1996. The CAB was established as a body corporate with perpetual succession in 1996 and is founded on the multi-agency concept, drawing together law enforcement officers, tax officials, social welfare officials as well as other specialist officers including legal officers, forensic analysts and financial analysts. This multi-agency concept is regarded by some as the model for other European jurisdictions.
website: https://www.cab.ie/
Dorset Street (; Sráid Dorset in Irish) is an important thoroughfare on the north side of Dublin, Ireland, and was originally part of the Slíghe Chualann, Dublin's ancient road to the north that crossed the bridging point of the River Liffey where Church Street is today. Subsequently, yet prior to the street being given its current name in the 18th century, the road was known as Drumcondra Lane and was shown on maps as such. It is divided into Dorset Street Lower (northeast end) and Dorset Street Upper (southwest end).
The Embassy of the United States of America in Dublin is the diplomatic mission of the United States of America to Ireland.
Street address: 42 Elgin Road (from Wikidata)
website: https://ie.usembassy.gov/
The Eblana Theatre in Ireland was situated in the basement of Busáras, Dublin's central bus station. A small theatre seating 225–240 people, it had no wings, nor other common items of theatrical architecture having been adapted from a short-lived newsreel cinema. It operated from 17 September 1959 until 1995.
Crumlin United Football Club is an Irish association football club based in Crumlin, Dublin. Founded in 1967, the club is one of the biggest producers of football talent in Ireland. They are linked with Nottingham Forest. Their main rival is Cherry Orchard. The club currently has teams in the Dublin District Schoolboys League and Leinster Senior League. The club is managed by Martin Loughran, who is also on the Leinster Senior League committee.
website: http://www.crumlin-united.ie/index.html
The TU Dublin School of Culinary Arts and Food Technology (formerly DIT School of Culinary Arts and Food Technology) is a part of the Technological University Dublin (formerly Dublin Institute of Technology).
website: http://www.dit.ie/colleges/collegeofartstourism/
Drumcondra Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Dhroim Conrach) was a voluntary hospital on Whitworth Road in Dublin, Ireland. It became an annex to the Rotunda Hospital in 1970.
East Wall Road (Irish: Bóthar an Phoirt Thoir) runs from the junction of the East-Link drawbridge and North Wall Quay, along the side of the northern part of Dublin port to the junction of the North Strand Road and Poplar Row.
The Dublin International Film Festival (DIFF; Irish: Féile Scannán Idirnáisiúnta Bhaile Átha Cliath) is an annual film festival that has been held in Dublin, Ireland, since 2003.
website: https://www.diff.ie
Fairview (Irish: Fionnradharc) is an inner coastal suburb of Dublin in Ireland, in the jurisdiction of Dublin City Council and in the city's D03 postal district. Part of the area forms Fairview Park, a recreational amenity laid out on land reclaimed from the sea.
The 2011 Nations Cup (also known as the Carling Nations Cup after its headline sponsor) was a round-robin football tournament between the Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales national teams. The first set of two games were played in Dublin in February, with the remaining four games played in May 2011. It was won by the Republic of Ireland, who won all three of their games without conceding a goal.
The Dublin lock-out was a major industrial dispute between approximately 20,000 workers and 300 employers that took place in Dublin, Ireland. The dispute, lasting from 26 August 1913 to 18 January 1914, is often viewed as the most severe and significant industrial dispute in Irish history. Central to the dispute was the workers' right to unionise.
Beaumont (Irish: Beaumont) is a suburb of Dublin, Ireland, bordered by Donnycarney, Santry and Artane. It lies within the postal districts of Dublin 5 and Dublin 9.
Oxmantown was a suburb on the opposite bank of the Liffey from Dublin, in what is now the city's Northside. It was founded in the 12th century by Hiberno-Norse Dubliners or "Ostmen" who either migrated voluntarily or were expelled from inside of the city walls of Dublin after the Anglo-Norman invasion and the 1171 beheading of Hasculf, the last Hiberno-Norse King of Dublin by the invading army. The settlement was originally known as Ostmanby or Ostmantown.
Park West (Irish: Páirc an Iarthair) is a large business park within west Dublin, Ireland. Over 300 companies, with more than 10,000 employees, are based in the business park. The area also contains some residential development.
Bull Island (Irish: Oileán an Tairbh), more properly North Bull Island (Oileán an Tairbh Thuaidh), is an island located in Dublin Bay in Ireland, about 5 km long and 800 m wide, lying roughly parallel to the shore off Clontarf (including Dollymount), Raheny, Kilbarrack, and facing Sutton. The island, with a sandy beach known as Dollymount Strand running its entire length, is a relatively recent, and inadvertent, result of human intervention in the bay. The island lies within the jurisdiction of, and is mostly owned by, Dublin City Council, and is managed by the Council's Parks and Landscape Division.
The Department of Transport (Irish: An Roinn Iompair) is a department of the Government of Ireland that is responsible for transport policy and overseeing transport services and infrastructure. The department is led by the Minister for Transport.
website: https://www.gov.ie/en/organisation/department-of-transport/
Chichester House or Carew's House was a building in College Green (formerly Hoggen Green), Dublin, Ireland, used from 1661 to the early 1700s to house the Parliament of Ireland. Originally built to be a hospital, it was never used as such.
The Church of St Nicholas of Myra (Without) is an Irish Roman Catholic church on Francis Street, Dublin. The site has been used as a place of worship as far back as the 12th century. The current church was built in 1829 and dedicated to Saint Nicholas in 1835.
website: https://www.francisstreetparish.ie/
Claremont Road is a cricket ground in Dublin, Ireland. The first recorded match held on the ground came in 1994, when Munster played North West. In local domestic cricket, the ground was the home of YMCA Cricket Club.
Charlemont House is a mansion in Dublin, Ireland. The house was built in 1763 and designed by William Chambers for James Caulfeild, 1st Earl of Charlemont. It is a stone fronted mansion on Dublin's Parnell Square. It was purchased by the government in 1870 and since 1933 it has housed the Hugh Lane Dublin City Gallery.
On 25 May 1921, during the Irish War of Independence, the Custom House in Dublin was occupied and then burnt in an operation by the Irish Republican Army (IRA). The Custom House was the headquarters of the Local Government Board for Ireland, an agency of the British administration in Ireland, against which the IRA was fighting in the name of the self-proclaimed Irish Republic. The operation, involving over 100 IRA volunteers, was a propaganda coup for the republicans but a military disaster for the IRA in the Irish capital. A force of British Auxiliaries quickly arrived and a gun battle erupted. Five IRA volunteers were killed (John Doyle, Edward Dorins, Daniel Head, Captain Patrick & Lieutenant Stephen O'Reilly), along with three civilians, and about 80 volunteers were captured.
Camden Street (Irish: Sráid Camden) is a street in Dublin 2. It links Ranelagh/Rathmines (Dublin 6) to the southern city centre of Dublin. It is divided into Camden Street Upper (southern end) and Camden Street Lower (northern end).
The Bull Wall (Irish: Balla an Bhulla), or North Bull Wall (Irish: Balla an Bhulla Thuaidh), at the Port of Dublin, extending from the estuary of the River Tolka and the district of Clontarf out nearly 3 km into Dublin Bay, is one of the two defining sea walls of the port, and faces the earlier-constructed Great South Wall. It has one of a trio of port lighthouses at the end of its extension breakwater, and a statue of Realt na Mara ('Mary, Queen of the Sea') partway along, and was responsible for the formation of North Bull Island with its nearly 5 km of beach.
Cathal Brugha Street ( Irish: Sráid Chathal Brugha) is a street on the northside of Dublin, Ireland.
City Colleges is an Irish provider of professional and academic education, based in Dublin. The institution runs degree and diploma courses in various professional fields such as in accounting (Association of Chartered Certified Accountants), business, computing, professional law, psychology, in Dublin city centre and Dundrum. The college specializes in professional education, aimed at graduates and people returning to education. It forms part of the City Education Group, which also includes the secondary school Ashfield College in Dundrum and the College of Progressive Education and City Language School in Dublin city.
website: http://www.citycolleges.ie
Britain Quay (Irish: Cé na Breataine) is a street and quay in Dublin on the south bank of the River Liffey between Sir John Rogerson's Quay and the confluence of the River Liffey, River Dodder and Grand Canal.
The Carlton Cinema is a former cinema located on the west side of Upper O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland opposite the Savoy Cinema. It opened on 16 April 1938 and closed on 20 October 1994.
Street address: 52-54 Upper O'Connell Street, Dublin 1 (from Wikidata)
The Church of Ireland College of Education (Irish: Coláiste Oideachais Eaglais na hÉireann), or C.I.C.E. as it was more commonly known, was one of the Republic of Ireland's five Colleges of Education which provided a Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.) degree, the qualification generally required to teach in Irish primary schools. Its degrees were awarded by Trinity College (the University of Dublin), as for the Marino Institute of Education and Froebel College of Education. It also provided postgraduate courses in Learning Support and Special Educational Needs and a Certificate Course for Special Needs Assistants.
website: http://www.cice.ie
Clanbrassil Street (; Irish: Sráid Chlann Bhreasail) is a street in Dublin south of the city centre. It runs from Robert Emmet Bridge on the Grand Canal to New Street. It is served by several bus routes. It is divided into Clanbrassil Street Upper (south end) and Clanbrassil Street Lower (north end).
Chartered Accountants Ireland was established by Royal Charter on 14 May 1888, and is Ireland's largest accountancy body. According to its website, it represents over 30,000 members globally.
website: http://www.charteredaccountants.ie/
The Church of St. John the Evangelist was a Church of Ireland church located on the west side of Fishamble Street in the centre of Dublin, Ireland. It was founded in the 12th century, and a great many of its parish records survive.
Clongriffin (Irish: Cluain Ghrífín) is a community in northern Donaghmede, on the northern fringe of Dublin, Ireland. The settlement was based on a master plan vision from major developer Gannon Homes, with significant investment in transport infrastructure and also community and recreational amenities. Development slowed during the downturn in the economy, although activity renewed in recent years, with planning permission secured for a hotel and a range of additional homes including a 16-storey apartment block with residential lounges and roof gardens..
St. Mary's Abbey (Irish: Mainistir Mhuire) was a former Cistercian abbey located near the junction of Abbey Street and Capel Street in Dublin, Ireland. Its territory stretched from the district known as Oxmanstown down along the River Liffey until it met the sea. It also owned large estates in other parts of Ireland. It was one of several liberties that existed in Dublin since the arrival of the Anglo-Normans in the 12th century, which gave it jurisdiction over its lands.
Locks Brasserie was a restaurant in Portobello, Dublin, Ireland. It was a fine dining restaurant that received one Michelin star for 2013 but lost it in 2014 due to the chef leaving.
website: http://www.locksbrasserie.com/restaurant
Street address: 127 St. Stephen's Green West, Dublin (from Wikidata)
Фэрвью-парк (англ. Fairview Park) — городской парк в Дублине, в районе Фэрвью. Открыт в 1934 году и занимает площадь 20 гектаров. Фэрвью-парк славится своими игровыми полями, детскими игровыми площадками и аллеями для прогулок. Парк начали разбивать в конце 1920-х годов, закон о нём был официально принят городским советом Дублина в 1934 году.
The Fr. Pat Noise plaque is a hoax commemorative plaque installed by two brothers on the balustrade of O'Connell Bridge over the River Liffey in Dublin, Ireland. It is about a fictitious Roman Catholic priest named Father Pat Noise.
Fishamble Street (; Irish: Sráid Sheamlas an Éisc) is a street in Dublin, Ireland within the old city walls.
Grangegorman Development Agency is an agency of the Government of Ireland charged with redevelopment of the Grangegorman Urban Quarter, formerly within the curtilage of St. Brendan's Hospital. Grangegorman (Irish: Gráinseach Ghormáin) itself is an inner city area on the Northside of Dublin. Grangegorman, at 29 hectares, was the largest undeveloped site in the City of Dublin.
Fumbally Lane (Irish: Lána Fumbally) is a narrow and historic street in Dublin, Ireland, south of the city centre in The Liberties, 'In name and character perhaps the most evocative of all the Liberties' streets.' It connects Blackpitts to New Street and is close to St Patrick's Cathedral.
The GAZE International LGBT Film Festival Dublin (typeset as GAZE and formerly known as the Dublin Lesbian and Gay Film Festival) is an annual film festival which takes place in Dublin, Ireland each Bank Holiday weekend in late July and early August. Founded in 1992, it has become Ireland's largest LGBTQ film event, and the country's biggest LGBT gathering aside from Dublin Pride.
website: https://www.gaze.ie/
George's Street Arcade is a shopping centre on South Great George's Street in Dublin. It is a Victorian style red-bricked indoor market of stalls and stores. It opened in 1881 as the South City Markets.
website: http://www.georgesstreetarcade.ie
Free University of Ireland (Saor-Ollscoil na hÉireann) is an independent university in Prussia Street, Dublin, Ireland established in 1986 by a small group of educationalists including Daragh Smyth, Paul John Cannon, Kevin O'Byrne, Padraig O'Fiannachta, and Mairéad Ní Chíosóig. The university is a free and independent institute not in receipt of state funding. It is run by a board of governors, is a charitable trust, and has research college status. Lecturers and administrators are not paid; students are charged only a fee to cover administrative expenses.
website: http://www.saor-ollscoil.ie/
The Great Industrial Exhibition in 1853 was held in Dublin, Ireland. In its day, it was the largest international event to be held in Ireland. The Irish Industrial Exhibition Building, located on the grounds of Leinster House, housed the entire fair. It lasted from 12 May to 31 October, Queen Victoria accompanied by the Prince Consort and the Prince of Wales, paid an official visit on 29 August.
Gardiner Street (Irish: Sráid Ghairdinéir) is a long Georgian street in Dublin, Ireland. It stretches from the River Liffey at its southern end via Mountjoy Square to Dorset Street at its northern end. The Custom House terminates the vista at the southern end, and the street is divided into Gardiner Street Upper (north end), Gardiner Street Middle and Gardiner Street Lower (south end).
Grand Canal Dock (Irish: Duga na Canálach Móire) is an urban area on the Southside of Dublin, Ireland. It is located on the border of eastern Dublin 2 and the westernmost part of Ringsend in Dublin 4, surrounding the Grand Canal Docks, an enclosed harbour where the Grand Canal meets the River Liffey. The area has undergone significant redevelopment since 2000, as part of the Dublin Docklands area redevelopment project.
Gaelcholáiste Reachrann is an Irish-speaking secondary school (Irish: gaelcholáiste), located in Donaghmede, Dublin in Ireland. The school is under the patronage of the Dublin and Dún Laoghaire Education and Training Board. Reachrann shares a premises with Grange Community College. In the 2020/21 school year, Gaelcholáiste Reachrann (GCR) had an enrollment of 499 students. The school was ranked 1st in its area by the Irish Times in the 2019 Good Schools Guide.
website: http://www.gcreachrann.ie/
The Battle of Dublin was a week of street battles in Dublin from 28 June to 5 July 1922 that marked the beginning of the Irish Civil War. Six months after the Anglo-Irish Treaty ended the recent Irish War of Independence, it was fought between the forces of the new Provisional Government and a section of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) that opposed the Treaty.
Merrion Square (Irish: Cearnóg Mhuirfean) is a Georgian garden square on the southside of Dublin city centre.
Henrietta Street (Irish: Sráid Henrietta) is a Dublin street, to the north of Bolton Street on the north side of the city, first laid out and developed by Luke Gardiner during the 1720s. A very wide street relative to streets in other 18th-century cities, it includes a number of very large red-brick city palaces and townhouses of Georgian design.
Nelson's Pillar (also known as the Nelson Pillar or simply the Pillar) was a large granite column capped by a statue of Horatio Nelson, built in the centre of what was then Sackville Street (later renamed O'Connell Street) in Dublin, Ireland. Completed in 1809 when Ireland was part of the United Kingdom, it survived until March 1966, when it was severely damaged by explosives planted by Irish republicans. Its remnants were later destroyed by the Irish Army.
Ranelagh ( RAN-ə-lə, locally REN-; Irish: Raghnallach, IPA: [ˈɾˠəinˠəl̪ˠəx]) is an affluent residential area and urban village on the Southside of Dublin, Ireland in the postal district of Dublin 6.
Herbert Road (Irish: Bóthar Hoirbeaird) in Ballsbridge, Ireland is a mostly residential road that links Tritonville Road with Lansdowne Road. Newbridge Avenue joins by the bridge, in front of Marian College and the former site of Sandymount High School next door. There are several hotels on the road. Noteworthy is the Mount Herbert Hotel which is a conversion of a terrace of stately homes. The road extends to the roundabout at the junction, which is part of Lansdowne Road. Both this road and Newbridge Avenue, are built on the former site of Haigs' distillery.
The House of Industry was a workhouse in Dublin, Ireland which existed from its establishment by an act of Parliament in 1703, "for the employment and maintaining the poor thereof".
Henry Street (Irish: Sráid Anraí) is located on Dublin's Northside and is one of the two principal shopping streets of Dublin (the other being Grafton Street).
Home Farm Road (Irish: Bóthar na Buaile), also referred to as Homefarm Road, is a regional road situated in upper Drumcondra, Dublin, Ireland. It is notable for being the place of origin of Home Farm F.C. It was previously named St. Mary's Road up to the tenth house.
The Irish Bible Institute (IBI) is an evangelical Bible institute located in Dublin, Ireland. Although it is unaccredited by the National Qualifications Authority of Ireland, it's Honors Bachelors and Masters level courses in Applied Theology and Transformational Leadership are validated by York St John University, and so confirms to the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education of England and Wales regulations. The IBI is a registered charity in the Republic of Ireland, with donations contributing to the institute's income.
Heytesbury Street (; Irish: Sráid Heytesbury) is a tree-lined inner city street north of the South Circular Road, in Portobello, Dublin, Ireland.
Hibernia College is a private third-level college in Ireland, founded in 2000 by Dr Seán Rowland and owned since 2021 by the Folens Group. It provides professional qualifications in education and healthcare through blended learning at undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
website: http://www.hiberniacollege.com/
Hill 16 – officially called Dineen Hill 16 and sometimes referred to as The Hill – is a terrace at the Railway End of Croke Park, the principal stadium and headquarters of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA). It is located on the Northside of the Irish capital city, Dublin.
Hume Street (; Irish: Sráid Hume) is a street in central Dublin located between Ely Place and St. Stephen's Green. It is named after Sir Gustavus Hume, 3rd Baronet (c.1670–1731) and his family.
The Irish International Exhibition (sometimes Dublin International) was a world's fair held in Dublin in 1907, when all of Ireland was still part of the United Kingdom.
The Hotel Riu Plaza The Gresham Dublin, formerly The Gresham Hotel, is a historic four-star hotel on O'Connell Street in Dublin, Ireland. It is a Dublin institution and landmark. Founded in 1817, the current structure was completed in 1927 and was completely refurbished in 2024.
website: http://www.gresham-hotels-dublin.com/
Harmonstown (Irish: Baile Hearman) is a small suburban locality of Dublin, Ireland, located on its Northside. It straddles the boundary between modern-day Artane and Raheny. It has a population of 5,566 inhabitants as of 2016
Dublin Docklands (Irish: Ceantar Dugaí Átha Cliath) is an area of the city of Dublin, Ireland, on both sides of the River Liffey, roughly from Talbot Memorial Bridge eastwards to the 3Arena. It mainly falls within the city's D01 and D02 postal districts but includes some of the urban fringes of the D04 district on its southernmost side.
website: http://www.docklands.ie/
Terenure (Irish: Tír an Iúir, meaning 'land of the yew tree'), called Roundtown from around 1800-1870, is a middle class suburb of Dublin in Ireland. It is located in the city's D6 and D6W postal districts. The population of all electoral divisions labelled as Terenure was 17,972 as of the 2022 census.
Bushy Park (Irish: Páirc na dTor) is a large, 20.5-hectare (51-acre), suburban public park in Terenure, Dublin, Ireland.
Elm Park Golf & Sports Club operates an 18-hole golf course and tennis club located at Nutley Lane, Donnybrook, Dublin 4, Ireland.
Drimnagh (Irish: Droimeanach) is a suburb in Dublin, Ireland. It lies to the south of the city between Walkinstown, Crumlin and Inchicore, bordered by the Grand Canal to the north and east. Drimnagh is in postal district Dublin 12. Drimnagh is in a townland and civil parish of the same name, in the barony of Uppercross.
The Gate Theatre is a theatre on Cavendish Row in Dublin, Ireland. It was founded in 1928.
website: http://www.gatetheatre.ie
The Emergency Response Unit (ERU) (Irish: Aonad Práinnfhreagartha) is the police tactical unit of the Garda Síochána, Ireland's national police and security service. The unit was a section of the forces' Special Detective Unit (SDU), under the Crime and Security Branch (CSB) until 2017, when the Special Tactics and Operational Command was created to take over its operational duties alongside Armed Support Units.
Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud is a restaurant in Dublin, Ireland. It is a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin star each year in the period 1989–1995 and two stars each year from 1996 to present. Egon Ronay Guide awarded the restaurant one star in the period 1983–1985 and 1987. It was mentioned in the Guide in 1988 and 1989.
Street address: 21 Upper Merrion Street (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.restaurantpatrickguilbaud.ie
Walkinstown (Irish: Baile Bhailcín) is a suburb of Dublin, Ireland, six kilometres southwest of the city centre. It is surrounded by Drimnagh to the north, Crumlin to the east, Greenhills to the south, and Ballymount, Bluebell, and Clondalkin to the west. It lies within the postal district of Dublin 12.
The Lansdowne Road football riot occurred during a friendly football match between the Republic of Ireland and England in Lansdowne Road Stadium in Dublin, Ireland on 15 February 1995. Due to tensions of the ongoing Troubles, England fans became extremely unruly, as well as violent, and ended up forcing the match to be abandoned.
The Masonic Female Orphan School of Ireland was a Masonic school in Dublin, Ireland. The school was instituted in 1792, with the aim of maintaining the daughters of indigent Freemasons, unable through death, illness, or incapacitation to support their families.
The Irish League of Credit Unions (ILCU) (Irish: Conradh na hÉireann de Chomhair Chreidmheasa) is a trade association for credit unions in Ireland. It operates in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. It is an unincorporated body governed by a board of directors elected by member credit unions.
Jervis Street Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Shráid Jervis) was a hospital in Jervis Street in Dublin, Ireland. The site of the hospital became the Jervis Shopping Centre.
Ratra House (Irish: Teach Ráth an tSratha), sometimes called Little Ratra, is one of the minor state residences located in the Phoenix Park in Dublin, Ireland.
The Irish Music Hall of Fame was a multimedia exhibition in Dublin, Ireland, which operated between 1999 and 2001. Associated with the Hot Press music magazine, the commercially-operated museum contained memorabilia from a number of Irish musicians including Van Morrison, U2, Sinéad O'Connor, Rory Gallagher, Bob Geldof and The Cranberries.
Marlborough Street (Irish: Sráid Mhaoilbhríde) is a street in the city centre of Dublin, Ireland.
Irish Queer Archive (IQA) (Irish: Cartlann Aerach na hÉireann) is a comprehensive collection of material in Ireland relating to homosexuality, LGBT literature and general queer studies.
L'Ecrivain (French pronunciation: [le.kʁi.vɛ̃], meaning "The Writer") was a restaurant on Lower Baggot Street in Dublin, Ireland, which was awarded one Michelin star from 2003 to 2020. The Michelin Guide awarded the restaurant the "Red M", indicating "good food at a reasonable price", from 1996 to 1999.
Street address: 109a Lower Baggot Street (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.lecrivain.com
The State Heraldic Museum in Kildare Street, Dublin, was founded in 1909 and was, prior to its closure in 2007, one of the oldest such museums in the world. Up to 2007, it was housed in part of the building occupied by the Office of the Chief Herald of Ireland, in the former Coffee Room of the Kildare Street Club.
website: http://www.nli.ie/en/heraldic-museum.aspx
Crumlin (Irish: Croimghlinn, meaning 'Crooked Glen') is a Southside suburb of Dublin, Ireland. Formerly a rural area, it became heavily built up from the early 20th century onwards. Crumlin is the site of Ireland's largest children's hospital, Our Lady's Children's Hospital.
The Department of Climate, Energy and the Environment (Irish: An Roinn Aeráide, Fuinnimh agus Comhshaoil) is a department of the Government of Ireland that is responsible for the telecommunications and broadcasting sectors and regulates, protects and develops the natural resources of Ireland. The head of the department is the Minister for Climate, Energy and the Environment.
website: https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-climate-energy-and-the-environment/
Garristown (Irish: Baile Gháire) is a village in County Dublin, Ireland. It is also a civil parish in the historic barony of Balrothery West. As of the 2022 census, the village had a population of 619.
The 2009 Bank of Ireland robbery was a large robbery of cash from the College Green cash centre of the Bank of Ireland in Dublin, Ireland, on 27 February 2009. It was the largest bank robbery in Ireland's history. Criminals engaged in the tiger kidnapping of a junior bank employee, 24-year-old Shane Travers, and forced him to remove €7.6 million in cash from the bank as his girlfriend and two others were held hostage.
Abbey Street (Irish: Sráid na Mainistreach) is a major street, located on the Northside of Dublin city centre, running from the Customs House and Beresford Place in the east to Capel Street in the west, where it continues as Mary's Abbey. The street is served by two Luas light rail stops, one at Jervis Street and Abbey Street Luas stop near O'Connell Street. About 1 km in length, it is divided into Abbey Street Upper (west end), Abbey Street Middle and Abbey Street Lower (east end). Abbey Street Old is a laneway to the rear of the buildings on the south side of Abbey Street Lower.
The Ballymun Flats referred to a number of flats—including the seven Ballymun tower blocks—in Ballymun, Dublin, Ireland. Built rapidly in the 1960s, there were 36 blocks in total, consisting of 7 fifteen-storey, 19 eight-storey, and 10 four-storey blocks. The complex was built in a Corbusian style known as towers in the park, which was popular in European and American cities in the mid-20th century.
The Department of Children, Disability and Equality (Irish: An Roinn Leanaí, Míchumais agus Comhionannais) is a department of the Government of Ireland. It is led by the Minister for Children, Disability and Equality.
website: https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-children-disability-and-equality/
Kinsealy (officially Kinsaley; Irish: Cionn Sáile) is an outer suburb of Dublin in Fingal, Ireland. Kinsealy is on the northside of the city, about 13 km from the city centre, on the Malahide Road, in the green belt between the suburbs of Balgriffin, Portmarnock and Malahide.
Conradh na Gaeilge ( KUN-rə nə GALE-gə; Irish: [ˈkɔn̪ˠɾˠə n̪ˠə ˈɡeːlʲɟə]), historically known in English as the Gaelic League, is a social and cultural organisation which promotes the Irish language in Ireland and worldwide. The organisation was founded in 1893 with Douglas Hyde as its first president, when it emerged as the successor of several 19th century groups such as the Gaelic Union. The organisation was a spearhead of the Gaelic revival and of Gaeilgeoir activism.
website: https://cnag.ie/en/home.html
The Battle of Clontarf (Irish: Cath Chluain Tarbh) took place on 23 April 1014 at Clontarf, near Dublin, on the east coast of Ireland. It pitted an army led by Brian Boru, High King of Ireland, against a Norse-Irish alliance comprising the forces of Sigtrygg Silkbeard, King of Dublin; Máel Mórda mac Murchada, King of Leinster; and a Viking army from abroad led by Sigurd of Orkney and Brodir of Mann. It lasted from sunrise to sunset, and ended in a rout of the Viking and Leinster armies.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) (Irish: An Roinn Gnóthaí Eachtracha agus Trádála) is a department of the Government of Ireland that is responsible for promoting the interests of Ireland in the European Union and the wider world. The head of the department is the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade.
website: https://www.gov.ie/en/organisation/department-of-foreign-affairs/, https://www.ireland.ie/en/dfa/
Mornington House was the Dublin social season Georgian residence of the Earls of Mornington at 24 Merrion Street, close to Leinster House.
Mount Pleasant Square is a Georgian garden square on the border of Rathmines and Ranelagh, in the city of Dublin, Ireland.
Molesworth Street (Irish: Sráid Theach Laighean, meaning 'Leinster House Street') is a street in Dublin, Ireland named after Richard Molesworth, 3rd Viscount Molesworth which links Dawson Street with Kildare Street and lies just over 200 m from St. Stephens Green in Dublin's south city centre.
The National Performing Arts School (NPAS) is located in Dublin, Ireland. Formed in 1993, its courses are aimed at students aged from 2 to 22 years old and include classes in drama, singing and dancing. Every two years, an NPAS show is staged at the Olympia Theatre. The arts school is run by Jill Doyle and Eamon Farrell (brother of Colin Farrell).
website: http://www.npas.ie/
Merrion Street (; Irish: Sráid Mhuirfean) is a major Georgian street on the southside of Dublin, Ireland, which runs along one side of Merrion Square. It is divided into Merrion Street Lower (north end), Merrion Square West and Merrion Street Upper (south end). It holds one entrance to the seat of the Irish Parliament, the Oireachtas, major government offices and two major cultural institutions.
In Ireland, the National Digital Research Centre is a national accelerator programme for entrepreneurs. It is delivered by a consortium led by Dublin-based Dogpatch Labs, and supported by multiple venture capital firms. It offers a "mentorship-driven" approach, with €100,000 "founder-friendly" funding, and early stage supports including non-equity pre-accelerator programmes available to entrepreneurs across Ireland. It also runs a Masterclass Series for companies working in the start-up space, teaching them how to support young digital venture teams with significant scale potential. It succeeded a previous version of the concept, run by a team on behalf of five Irish third-level institutions.
website: http://www.ndrc.ie/
The Meath Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal na Mí) was a general hospital in the Earl of Meath's Liberty in Dublin, Ireland. It was absorbed into the Tallaght Hospital in June 1998.
Mercy College Coolock is a Catholic girls' secondary school in Coolock, Dublin, Ireland. It was founded in 1963 by the Sisters of Mercy. It shares grounds with Coolock House, formerly the home of Catherine McAuley, founder of the Sisters of Mercy, and with Scoil Chaitríona, a girls' primary school.
website: http://www.mercycoolock.ie/
The Molyneux Asylum for Blind Females was opened June 1, 1815 in Peter Street, Dublin, in what was formerly the residence of Thomas Molyneux (1641-1733), whose sister-in-law, Lucy Domville, had been blind. The building had been sold to Philip Astley, operating as Astley's Amphitheatre from 1789 to 1812, then the actor Henry Johnstone, intended to develop it as a theatre, however it reverted back to the Molyneux and was leased to a charity as an asylum for blind women. There was an Anglican church (Christ Church) attached to the asylum. Music was an important part of the school and worship in the chapel. R.W. Beaty was an organist and music instructor from 1824. Henry Charles Shellard was organist and choirmaster from 1901 to 1955. The chapel was called the Albert Chapel, honoring the Queen's Husband.
Monto was the nickname for the one-time red light district in the northeast of Dublin, Ireland. The Monto was roughly the area bounded by Talbot Street, Amiens Street, Gardiner Street, Seán McDermott Street (formerly Gloucester Street) and Buckingham Street and included Mabbot Street and Mecklenburgh Street. The name is derived from Montgomery Street (now called Foley Street), which runs parallel to the lower end of Talbot Street towards what is now Connolly Station. Montgomery Street is believed to have been named after Elizabeth Montgomery, who was married to Luke Gardiner, 1st Viscount Mountjoy.
Mount Carmel Community Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Pobail Mount Carmel) is a short-stay rehabilitation hospital in Churchtown, Dublin, Ireland. It was previously the only private maternity hospital in Ireland, albeit it offered other services for most of its history.
website: http://www.mountcarmel.ie/mount_carmel_hospital.html
Mayor Square (Irish: Cearnóg an Mhéara) is in Dublin, in the Docklands area. The National College of Ireland is based there.
Merrion Castle was a castle situated about 300m south of the present-day Merrion Gates, to the south of Dublin city centre. Built in the early fourteenth century, it was from the sixteenth century to the early eighteenth century the principal seat of the Fitzwilliam family, who acquired the title Viscount Fitzwilliam. After the Fitzwiliams moved to Mount Merrion House in about 1710 the castle fell into ruin, and it was demolished in 1780, though there were remains visible as late as 1837. No trace of Merrion Castle survives today. It was located opposite Merrion Gates, on the site of St. Mary's Home and School for the Blind. Its location, and the modern site of St.Mary's, can be seen on historical maps, including the six-inch (1829-1841) Ordnance Survey of Ireland maps.
The Milltown Institute of Theology and Philosophy was a Jesuit-run institution of higher education and research, located in Ranelagh, County Dublin, Ireland.
website: http://www.milltown-institute.ie
Moore Street (; Irish: Sráid Uí Mhúraigh) is a street in central Dublin, Ireland, off Henry Street, one of Ireland's main shopping streets. The famous Moore Street open-air fruit and vegetable market is Dublin's oldest food market. The market there is a famous landmark on the northside of the city.
Nassau Street (; Irish: Sráid Nassau) is a street in central Dublin, running along the south side of Trinity College. It goes from Grafton Street in the west to the junction of South Leinster Street and Kildare Street in the east.
Griffith Barracks (Irish: Dún Uí Ghríofa) is a former military barracks on the South Circular Road, Dublin, Ireland.
Mint Restaurant was a Michelin star–winning restaurant located in Ranelagh, Dublin in Ireland. It was owned by the celebrity chef Dylan McGrath. The restaurant was featured in the 2008 RTÉ One fly on the wall documentary The Pressure Cooker, a programme which led to much complaint from McGrath's fellow chefs in the Irish media about his alleged mistreatment of his staff. The closure of Mint Restaurant was publicised in the Evening Herald on 23 April 2009.
website: http://mintrestaurant.ie/index.htm
The National Leprechaun Museum is a privately owned museum dedicated to Irish folklore and mythology, through the oral tradition of storytelling. It is located on Jervis Street in Dublin, Ireland, since 10 March 2010. It claims to be the first leprechaun museum in the world.
website: http://www.leprechaunmuseum.ie/
The Embassy of France in Ireland (French: L'ambassade de France en Irlande) is the diplomatic mission of the French Republic in Ireland. It is located in Dublin.
Street address: 66 Fitzwilliam Lane (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.ambafrance-ie.org/
The Commons Restaurant was a restaurant located in the historic Newman House (now location of the Museum of Literature) on St. Stephen's Green in Dublin, Ireland. It was owned by Michael Fitzgerald.
A series of co-ordinated bombings were carried out in Dublin and Monaghan, Ireland, by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) on 17 May 1974. Three car bombs exploded in Dublin during the evening rush hour and a fourth exploded in Monaghan almost ninety minutes later. They killed 33 civilians and injured almost 300. Together, the bombings were the deadliest attack of the conflict known as the Troubles (although the deadliest single incident would be the Omagh bombing in 1998), and the deadliest attack in the Republic's history. Most of the victims were young women, although the ages of the dead ranged from 4½ months up to 80 years.
Dawson Street (; Irish: Sráid Dásain) is a street on the southern side of central Dublin, running from St Stephen's Green to the walls of Trinity College Dublin. It is the site of the residence of the Lord Mayor of Dublin, the Mansion House.
D'Olier Street ( duh-LEER; Irish: Sráid D'Olier) is a street in the southern city-centre of Dublin, the capital of Ireland. It and Westmoreland Street are two broad streets whose northern ends meet at the southern end of O'Connell Bridge over the River Liffey. Its southern end meets Fleet Street, Townsend Street, College Street and Pearse Street.
The Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) is a digital repository for Ireland's humanities, social science and cultural heritage data. It was designed as an open access infrastructure that allows for interactive use and sustained growth. Three institutions, Royal Irish Academy (RIA), Trinity College Dublin (TCD), and Maynooth (now Maynooth University or MU), currently manage the repository and implement its policies, guidelines and training. The Department of Education and Skills has primarily funded DRI since 2016 through the Higher Education Authority and the Irish Research Council. As of 2018, DRI is home to over 28,000 items.
website: http://www.dri.ie/
The Foundling Hospital was an institution for abandoned children in Dublin, Ireland which was established in 1730.
Jervis Street (Irish: Sráid Jervis) is a street on the northside of Dublin, Ireland laid out in the 17th century and named for Sir Humphrey Jervis.
The New Theatre is a small theatre, with 66 seats, in Temple Bar, Dublin. Founded in 1997, it was closed temporarily during 2007 for renovation works.
Street address: 43 East Essex Street, Temple Bar, Dublin 2, Co. Dublin 2, Republic of Ireland (from Wikidata)
website: http://thenewtheatre.com
The Four Courts Marshalsea was a prison in Dublin, Ireland until 1874. The keeper of the prison was the Marshal of the Four Courts, a role filled after 1546 by the Constable of Dublin Castle.
The Bachelor's Walk massacre occurred in Dublin, on 26 July 1914, when a column of troops of the King's Own Scottish Borderers was accosted by a crowd on Bachelor's Walk following the Howth gun-running operation. After some verbal baiting, the troops attacked "hostile but unarmed" protesters with rifle fire and bayonets – resulting in the deaths of four civilians and injuries to in excess of 30 more. The four killed were Mary Duffy (50), Patrick Quinn (50), James Brennan (18) and Sylvester Pidgeon (40) who succumbed to his wounds on 24 September. One of those shot was Luke Kelly, the father of folk singer Luke Kelly.
York Street (Irish: Sráid Eabhrac) is a street in Dublin in the Republic of Ireland that runs between Aungier Street in the west and St Stephen's Green in the east.
Church of Our Lady of the Assumption is a Roman Catholic church in Ballyfermot, Dublin, Ireland. It is next to St. Raphael's National School.
website: https://assumptionballyfermot.ie/
Beggars Bush Barracks was a British Army barracks located at Beggars Bush in Dublin, Ireland.
Taylor Galleries is a contemporary commercial art gallery in Dublin, Ireland.
Street address: 5 Ailesbury Road, Ballsbridge, D04 W221, Dublin (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.gov.pl/web/irlandia
Fownes Street is a street in Dublin, Ireland, that runs from Wellington Quay in the north to Dame Street in the south.
Irish Fiscal Advisory Council (Fiscal Council; Irish: Comhairle Chomhairleach Bhuiséadach na hÉireann) is a non-departmental statutory body providing independent assessments and analysis of the Irish Government's fiscal stance, its economic and budgetary forecasts, and its compliance with fiscal rules. The Fiscal Council was created in July 2011 as part of a wider agenda of budgetary reform after the 2008 financial crisis.
Street address: Whitaker Square, Sir John Rogerson's Quay - Dublin 2 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.fiscalcouncil.ie/
St Andrew's Street is a retail street on the south side of Dublin, Ireland.
Coláiste na hÉireann (Irish: [ˈkɔlˠaːʃtʲə nˠə ˈheːɾʲən̪ˠ]; English: "College of Ireland") is a third-level college in Dublin, Ireland offering qualifications in the study of translation and the Irish language.
website: https://www.gaelchultur.com
Anglesea Road Cricket Ground is a cricket ground based on Anglesea Road in Ballsbridge, Dublin 4, Ireland. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1971, when South Leinster played Ulster Country. The ground has hosted a single List-A match which saw Papua New Guinea play the United States.
Observatory Lane is a cricket ground in Rathmines, Dublin, Ireland.
Harcourt Street (Irish: Sráid Fhearchair) is a street located in Dublin City, Ireland.
Mary Street (Irish: Sráid Mhuire) is a predominantly retail street in Dublin, Ireland on the northside of the city contiguous with Henry Street.
Cloghran (Irish: Clochrán) is a civil parish in the ancient barony of Castleknock in Ireland. According to Lewis' 1837 survey,
The Irish Heritage Trust (IHT) is an architectural and cultural organisation which aims to preserve, maintain and understand notable Irish buildings for the purposes of education, research and recreation. Founded by the Irish state in 2006 as a national heritage property organisation, it was partly modelled on the National Trust in the U.K.
website: http://www.irishheritagetrust.ie/
Inchicore (Irish: Inse Chór) is a suburb of Dublin, Ireland. Located approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) west of the city centre, Inchicore was originally a small village separate from Dublin. The village developed around Richmond Barracks (built 1810) and Inchicore railway works (built 1846), before being incorporated into the expanding city bounds. Inchicore is a largely residential area and is home to the association football club St Patrick's Athletic FC.
Newbridge Avenue (Irish: Ascaill an Droichid Nua) is a road in the Sandymount district of Dublin which links Herbert Road and Tritonville Road.
The Noyeks fire was a fatal fire that took place at the Noyeks timber factory on Parnell Street, Dublin, Ireland on 27 March 1972, and claimed the lives of 8 people; seven women and one man who died in the inferno.
Omni Park is a large shopping centre and retail park in the Santry area of north Dublin, Ireland. It is located close to the M50 motorway. It comprises over 28,600 square metres (308,000 sq ft) of retail space in 86 retail units over 2 floors of an indoor shopping mall and also several outlets externally. Units range from 49 square metres (530 sq ft) to 3,213 square metres (34,580 sq ft). Omni Park also features a selection of eateries, an Oratory and an 11 screen cinema called IMC (formerly called Omniplex). The centre has surface and multi-storey car parking.
website: http://www.omnipark.ie
Oriel House, Westland Row is a building at the intersection of Westland Row and Fenian Street in Dublin. It is owned by Trinity College Dublin and serves as the headquarters for CONNECT, the Centre for Future Networks and Communications (formerly CTVR), a Science Foundation Ireland-sponsored research centre.
Rathgar (Irish: Ráth Garbh, meaning 'rough ringfort') is a suburb of Dublin, Ireland. Originally a village, which from 1862 was part of the township of Rathmines and Rathgar, it was absorbed by the growing city and became a suburb in 1930. It lies about three kilometres south of the city centre.
Stratford College is an independent co-educational multi-denominational day school on the junction of Zion Road and Orwell Road, Dublin, Ireland predominantly for people of the Jewish faith. One of the main founders was Elaine Feldman. The school is located adjacent to Herzog Park.
website: http://www.stratfordcollege.ie/
Herzog Park (Irish: Páirc Herzog) is a small public park in Rathgar, Dublin, Ireland. Named for Chaim Herzog, sixth President of Israel, who grew up in Dublin, it occupies the site of a former stone quarry and was laid out as a neighbourhood park in the 1980s. It contains some trees, a children's playground, a bring centre for household recycling and the grounds of Rathgar Tennis Club.
The Queen's Theatre, Dublin, located in Pearse Street was originally built in 1829 as the Adelphi Theatre. This building was demolished in 1844 and rebuilt. It reopened that same year as the Queens Royal Theatre, the new owner having been granted a Royal Patent to operate as a patent theatre. The theatre quickly became known as simply the Queen's.
The O'Brien Institute is a building complex off the Malahide Road, near Mount Temple Comprehensive School in Marino, Dublin, Ireland. Built in 1880–1883 as an orphan home and school, the purchase of the land, and building costs, were financed by a trust that was founded by the will of Bridget O'Brien in 1876. The last four boarders left in 1976, when the school, which was run by the Irish Christian Brothers, closed. The institute was bought by Dublin Corporation, and is currently primarily used by Dublin Fire Brigade as a training centre, while the educational trust continues within the Archdiocese of Dublin.
The Old Church of St. George, commonly called "Little George's" in Hill Street (formerly Temple Street Lower) Parish of St. Mary, Dublin was built in 1668 by the Eccles family for their workmen and also as a chapel-of-ease to a nearby St. Mary's Church. However, that St. Mary's Church was not St. Mary's Church, Dublin as that church’s foundation stone was laid in 1700, and it was not St. Mary's Abbey, Dublin as that was dissolved in 1539. Therefore St George's Church, Hill Street, may have been a Chapel-of-Ease to St. Michan's Church in Church Street. The main body of the church, with the exception of the tower, was demolished in 1894.
Poetry Ireland (Irish: Éigse Éireann) is an organisation for poets and poetry, in both Irish and English, in the island of Ireland. It is a private nonprofit organisation that receives support from the Arts Council of Ireland and the Arts Council of Northern Ireland. It was founded in 1978 by John F. Deane and is based in Parnell Square, Dublin. Its thirtieth anniversary in 2008 was celebrated by events all over Ireland culminating in an event at the Irish College in Paris.
Street address: 11 Parnell Square East, Dublin 1, D01 ND60 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.poetryireland.ie
Poolbeg Generating Station (Irish: Cumhachtstáisiún an Phoill Bhig), colloquially known as the Poolbeg Stacks, is a power station owned and operated by the Electricity Supply Board of Ireland (ESB). There are two stations on the site, the older thermal station containing units 1, 2, and 3 and the combined cycle gas station containing units CG14, CG15 and ST16, which is located toward the eastern end of the site. The six units have a total installed capacity of 1020 MW.
New Bride Street (Irish: Sráid Bhríde Nua) is a street in the Dublin 8 area of Dublin in Ireland. It runs between Kevin Street and Heytesbury Street in Dublin's south inner city.
The Provost's House is a five-bay, two-storey house with seven-bay single-storey wings on each side, which dates from 1759 and was built for Provost Francis Andrews of Trinity College.
Newgate Prison (Irish: Príosún an Gheata Nua) was a place of detention in Dublin, Ireland. It was initially located at Cornmarket, near Christ Church Cathedral, on the south side of the Liffey and was originally one of the city gates before being moved to a new purpose built prison on Green Street on the north side of the city in 1781. The prison finally closed in 1863 while the building was demolished in 1893. The site today contains Saint Michan's Park while the remains of the prison's boundary walls still form part of the boundary of the park.
Our Lady of Dublin is a statue of the Madonna and Child in Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland, that represents the Black Madonna of Ireland.
The Point Village (Irish: Sráidbhaile an Iosta) is a commercial and residential development in the North Wall area of Dublin, Ireland. The elements of the €800 million development completed to date include offices and residential and hotel accommodation, a small shopping centre, a cinema, a museum and a five-level underground car park. The development ran into a number of problems and was taken over by NAMA in April 2013.
website: http://pointsquare.ie/
O'Toole Park (Irish: Páirc Uí Thuathail), also known as Lorcan O'Toole Park (Irish: Páirc Lorcáin Uí Thuathail), is a Gaelic games venue in Crumlin, Dublin. The ground was opened in 1957 by then Minister for Defence Kevin Boland. It is named after Lorcan O'Toole, who was secretary of the Dublin County Board from 1915 to 1940.
Park Avenue (Irish: Ascaill na Páirce) in the suburb of Sandymount, Dublin 4, Ireland is the name of a road joining Sydney Parade Avenue to Gilford Road. It is home to a number of cricket and rugby union grounds including Pembroke Cricket Club, the Railway Union Sports Club and Monkstown Rugby Club. Of architectural note is the Church of St John (Church of Ireland), noted for its French Bath stone's decay due to its proximity to the sea. The church is on an island at the junction of Park Avenue and St Johns Road, which continues east towards the sea at Sandymount Strand.
website: http://www.phantom.ie/
The North Circular Road (Irish: An Cuarbhóthar Thuaidh), designated as the R101 regional road, is an important thoroughfare on the northside of Dublin, in Ireland. It is the northside equivalent of the South Circular Road.
Street address: 16, Elgin Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4 (from Wikidata)
website: http://ireland.mfa.gov.ua
The Nine Arches Bridge is a viaduct over the River Dodder in Milltown, Dublin, Ireland. The Luas tram Green Line crosses the bridge. There is no access for pedestrians. The bridge is included on the Record of Protected Structures maintained by Dublin City Council.
Parnell Street (Irish: Sráid Pharnell) is a street in Dublin, Ireland, which runs from Capel Street in the west to Gardiner Street and Mountjoy Square in the east. It is at the north end of O'Connell Street, where it forms the south side of Parnell Square.
Pimlico is an inner city area of Dublin, Ireland on the southside in Dublin 8. It lies between Thomas Court and Ardee Street. At the Thomas Court end of Pimlico is Pimlico Cottages. It is close to the St. James's Gate Guinness Brewery. Similar to other areas of Dublin's Liberties, such as The Coombe, Pimlico was historically home to families of weavers many of whom had emigrated from France via London.
O'Connell Street (Irish: Sráid Uí Chonaill) is a street in the centre of Dublin, Ireland, running north from the River Liffey. It connects the O'Connell Bridge to the south with Parnell Street to the north and is roughly split into two sections bisected by Henry Street. The Luas tram system runs along the street.
Dalymount Park (Irish: Páirc Chnocán Uí Dhálaigh) is a football stadium in Phibsborough on the Northside of Dublin, Ireland. It is the home of Bohemian F.C., who have played there since the early 20th century.
The Richmond General Penitentiary was a prison established in 1820 in Grangegorman, Dublin, Ireland as an alternative to transportation. It was part of an experiment into a penitentiary system which also involved Millbank Penitentiary, London. Richmond and Millbank penitentiaries were the first prisons in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland to specialise in reform rather than punishment. The building was designed by the architect Francis Johnston and decorated by George Stapleton. The building ceased to be a penitentiary in 1831, and later became part of the Richmond Asylum.
Sheriff Street (Irish: Sráid an tSirriam) is a street in the north inner city of Dublin, Ireland, lying between East Wall and North Wall and often considered to be part of the North Wall area. It is divided into Sheriff Street Lower (west end) and Sheriff Street Upper (east end).
Sandymount Avenue (Irish: Ascaill Dhumhach Thrá) joins Merrion Road to Gilford Road in Sandymount, Dublin. Sandymount railway station is located roughly halfway along it at a level crossing. It is a residential area.
The Screen Cinema was a three-screen cinema in Hawkins Street, Dublin, Ireland. Originally opened in the 1970s as a single-screen cinema, it closed in 2016 and was demolished in 2018.
Street address: 2 Townsend Street, Dublin 2 (from Wikidata)
Shandon is a small collection of roads on Dublin's Northside within the district of Phibsboro. It consists of three terraces of Edwardian (Victorian style) houses along the banks of the Royal Canal, built around 1926.
The Royal City of Dublin Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Ríoga Chathair Bhaile Átha Cliath) was a health facility on Baggot Street, Dublin, Ireland. The building from which the hospital operated, which was vacant as of early 2024, is a protected structure.
The Royal College of Science for Ireland (RCScI) was an institute for higher education in Dublin which existed from 1867 to 1926, specialising in physical sciences and applied science. It was originally based on St Stephen's Green, moving in 1911 to a purpose-built Royal College of Science building on Merrion Street, now known as Government Buildings. In 1926 it was absorbed into University College Dublin (UCD) as the faculty of Science and Engineering.
Sandymount High School was a coeducational secondary school on Herbert Road, Sandymount, Dublin 4 which operated for over 50 years before closing in 1999.
Shelbourne Road (Irish: Bóthar Shíol Bhroin) is a road in Ballsbridge, in the southeast part of Dublin, Ireland.
The School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences established in 1977, is the pharmacy school of Trinity College Dublin located in Dublin,. It is one of three centres in the Ireland that provides education in Pharmacy. It was based at Woodside House on Shrewsbury Road in Ballsbridge. Since 2006 it is currently housed in the Panoz Institute adjacent to the Hamilton Building at the east end of Trinity College Dublin. The Head of School is Professor John Gilmer.
website: http://www.pharmacy.tcd.ie/
Shrewsbury Road (, ; Bóthar Sriúsbaire in Irish) is a street in Dublin, Ireland, and was the sixth-most-expensive street in the world in 2007, ahead of more well-known streets such as the Via Suvretta in St. Moritz and Carolwood Drive in Beverly Hills. Located in Ballsbridge, Dublin 4, the street is bordered to the north by Merrion Road and to the south by Ailesbury Road.
Raglan Road (Irish: Bóthar Raglan) is a road running between Pembroke Road and Clyde Road in Ballsbridge, Dublin 4, Ireland.
The School of Law at Trinity College Dublin is the oldest established law school in Ireland. It teaches law to undergraduate and postgraduate students, as well as conducting legal research and holding conferences.
Sir John Rogerson's Quay (Irish: Cé Sir John Rogerson) is a street and quay in Dublin on the south bank of the River Liffey between City Quay in the west and Britain Quay. Named for politician and property developer Sir John Rogerson (1648–1724), the quay was formerly part of Dublin Port. It has some of the few remaining campshire warehouses in Dublin.
Mount Street Lower (Irish: Sráid an Mhóta Íochtarach) is a street in Dublin, Ireland laid out during the 1780s.
Lillie's Bordello was a nightclub in Dublin, Ireland that operated between 1991 and 2019. As a high-end establishment, it was symbolic of the culture of the Celtic Tiger era (c. 1994–2007).
The Tholsel was an important building in Dublin, Ireland which combined the function of civic hall, guildhall, court, gaol and even for a period acted as parliament house from 1641-48.
Summerhill (Irish: Cnoc an tSamhraidh) is a mainly residential area of Dublin, Ireland, on the Northside of the city. It is located roughly in the area bordered by Gardiner Street in the west, Mountjoy Square, Ballybough in the north, northeast and east, and Talbot Street and Amiens Street in the south and southeast. The name derives from the eponymous street of Summerhill Parade. It is one of the most densely populated and economically deprived areas of the city.
Foley Street (Irish: Sráid Uí Fhoghlú) is a street in Dublin running from James Joyce Street to Buckingham Street Lower. It was formerly known as Worlds End Lane and Montgomery Street.
Cloghran (Irish: Clochrán) is a civil parish in the ancient barony of Coolock in Ireland. It consists of eight townlands: Baskin, Cloghran, Clonshagh, Corballis, Middletown, Springhill, Stockhole, Toberbunny. According to Lewis' 1837 survey,
Jammet Restaurant, also called Restaurant Jammet (pronounced [ʁɛstɔʁɑ̃ ʒamɛ]) or The Jammet Hotel and Restaurant, was a French restaurant located in Dublin, Ireland between 1901 and 1967.
On the night of 18 June 1875 a fire broke out in a whiskey storehouse in the Liberties area of Dublin. The escaped whiskey formed a burning river six inches (15 cm) deep that is said to have flowed as far as the Coombe, destroying 35 houses and killing several pigs. While there were no human fatalities as a direct result of the fire or flood, 13 people died of alcohol poisoning after drinking from the stream of whiskey, which was of undiluted cask strength. Total property damage was estimated at over £100,000, of which the lost whiskey constituted £54,000.
The Richmond Surgical Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Máinliachta Richmond) was a general hospital in Grangegorman, Dublin, Ireland.
7 Eccles Street was a row house in Dublin, Ireland. It was the home of Leopold Bloom, protagonist of the novel Ulysses (1922) by James Joyce. The house was demolished in 1967, and the site is now occupied by the Mater Private Hospital.
Marino Crescent (Irish: An Corrán, meaning 'The Sickle') is a Georgian crescent of 26 houses at the junction of Marino, Fairview and Clontarf in Dublin 3, Ireland. It is the only Georgian crescent in Dublin.
The Pallas Projects/Studios (PP/S, Pallas Studios, Pallas Contemporary Projects) is an artist-run and non-commercial gallery and studio space in Dublin, Ireland.
The Bradogue River is a small river in Dublin that rises in Cabra and flows into the River Liffey, with its primary outfall at Ormond Quay. It is culverted for its entire course.
Kenilworth Square is a Victorian square in the Rathgar area of Dublin 6, Ireland. It was developed by several different developers between 1858 and 1879. The houses are in a variety of different Victorian styles although all are finished in red brick.
Grand Canal Street railway works, also known as The Factory, served the Dublin and Kingstown Railway (D&KR), its successors the Dublin, Wicklow and Wexford Railway (DW&WR) and the Dublin and South Eastern Railway (DSER). It was preceded by a small "engine hospital" maintenance depot at Serpentine Avenue.
The Whitworth Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Whitworth) was a general hospital on Morning Star Avenue in Grangegorman, Dublin, Ireland.
UCD Boat Club or University College Dublin Boat Club, founded in 1917, is the rowing club of University College Dublin. It is based in Islandbridge in Dublin, along the River Liffey, and also trains on Blessington Lake.
Street address: 12/13 Bow Street, Dublin 7, D07 WV04 (from Wikidata)
website: http://bowstreet.ie/
The Bethesda Chapel, Dublin, was an Episcopal Church of Ireland, church on Granby Row and Dorset Street, Dublin.
The Tivoli Theatre was a theatre on Francis Street in The Liberties, Dublin which opened in 1934 and operated until 2019 when it was demolished and replaced by "StayCity Aparthotel Tivoli", a 4-star hotel.
Eustace Street (Irish: Sráid an Iústásaigh) is a street in the Temple Bar area of Dublin, Ireland.
Grosvenor Square ( GROH-vən-ər, Irish: Cearnóg Grosvenor) is a Victorian square located in the inner suburb of Rathmines on the Southside of Dublin. While construction of the houses commenced in the late 1850s, it continued on a piecemeal basis for the next four decades. The square was finally completed in the beginning of the 20th century.
St. Kevin's Football Club is an association football club originally based in Whitehall, Dublin. The club has since spread its reach across multiple locations in Dublin 9 and The Ward, County Dublin. The club fields more than 40 schoolboy teams who play in the Dublin District Schoolboys League. At senior level, the club fields two sides who play in the Leinster Senior League. The club name was changed from St. Kevin’s Boys Club in 2023 with the introduction of a girls football section for the first time.
The Embassy of Japan in Dublin (Japanese: 在アイルランド日本国大使館) is the diplomatic mission of Japan in Ireland. It is located in the capital city of Ireland, Dublin.
Street address: Nutley Building, Merrion Centre, Nutley Lane (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.ie.emb-japan.go.jp
Pelletstown railway station is a railway station on the Western Commuter line in the Cabra area of Dublin, Ireland, beside the Royal Canal. The station was opened on 26 September 2021 by Minister for Transport Eamon Ryan and Tánaiste Leo Varadkar, becoming the first new station to open on the Iarnród Éireann network since Oranmore railway station opened in 2013.
IBNR ID: 6090868
Capel Street ( Irish: Sráid Chéipil) is a predominantly commercial street in Dublin, Ireland, laid out in the 17th century by Humphrey Jervis.
Dublin Landings is a commercial and residential development in the Docklands Strategic Development Zone and within the International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) along the Dublin quays, Ireland. The development includes 300 private rented sector apartments, 70,000 sq m of commercial space and 1,600 sq m of retail and leisure space. The 2.35-hectare (5.8-acre) site was developed by the Ballymore Group and Oxley Holdings and as of 2022 occupiers include tenants such as WeWork, the NTMA, National Asset Management Agency. The Central Bank of Ireland is located directly next to the Dublin Landings development.
The Garda Síochána Inspectorate (Irish: Cigireacht an Gharda Síochána), often simply the Garda Inspectorate, is a statutory independent body in Ireland, established to assure the effectiveness and efficiency of the police and security service of the country, the Garda Síochána. It can conduct inspections on its own initiative or at the request of Ireland's Policing Authority or the relevant minister.
website: http://www.gsinsp.ie
St John Ambulance Ireland (SJAI), previously known as the St John Ambulance Brigade of Ireland, is a charitable voluntary organisation in Ireland. For constitutional reasons it is not a full member association of the Venerable Order of Saint John and the international St. John Ambulance movement, but rather is classed as an "associated body". The organisation is dedicated to the teaching and practice of medical first aid. It is engaged in first aid training to the public, providing first aid and ambulance cover at public events, patient transport and community services.
website: https://www.stjohn.ie
St. Bride's Church was a Church of Ireland church located at the corner of Bride Street and Bride Road, Dublin, Ireland.
South Lotts is a small area to the south of the river Liffey in inner-city Dublin 4, one km east of Dublin City Centre, Ireland. It was created following the embankment of the River Liffey in 1711 between the city and Ringsend, thereby reclaiming the marshes as North and South Lotts. It is at the westernmost end of Ringsend, overlapping with the Grand Canal Dock area, but is generally accepted to be within Ringsend.
St Declan's College is an all-boys, Catholic secondary school located in Cabra West, Dublin, Ireland. It was originally established by The Christian Brothers in 1960 with an initial enrollment of 75. It is now a public (state-funded) school under the management of the Edmund Rice Schools Trust.
website: http://www.stdeclanscollege.ie/
Spencer Dock (Irish: Duga Spencer) is a former wharf area, close to where the Royal Canal meets the River Liffey, in the North Wall area of Dublin, Ireland. As of the 21st century, the area has been redeveloped with occupants of the Spencer Dock development including the Convention Centre Dublin, PricewaterhouseCoopers' Irish headquarters, Credit Suisse and TMF Group. The Central Bank of Ireland and NTMA have offices in the nearby Dublin Landings development.
St. Patrick's Institution, North Circular Road, Dublin 7, was an Irish penal facility for 16- to 21-year-old males. It had a capacity of 217 beds and had an average inmate population of 221 in 2009. It was a closed, medium security prison.
St. Brendan's Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Naomh Breandán) was a psychiatric facility located in the north Dublin suburb of Grangegorman. It formed part of the mental health services of Dublin North East with its catchment area being North West Dublin. It is now the site of a modern mental health facility known as the "Phoenix Care Centre". Since the official opening of the Richmond Lunatic Asylum in 1815 the Grangegorman site has continuously provided institutional facilities for the reception of the mentally ill until the present day. As such the Phoenix Care Centre represents the continuation of the oldest public psychiatric facility in Ireland.
St. Mary del Dam is a former parish church in Dublin, Ireland that for many years occupied an important position in the city, and after which Dame Street is named.
The South Circular Road (Irish: An Cuarbhóthar Theas), designated as the R811 regional road, is a road in Dublin, Ireland. One of the longest in the city, it runs from Islandbridge in the west, through Rialto and Dolphin's Barn to Portobello, near the centre. It runs mainly through residential areas and is used by numerous bus routes. It is the southside equivalent of the North Circular Road.
St Mary's Chapel of Ease, also known as "The Black Church", is a former chapel in Dublin, Ireland. Now deconsecrated, it was a church of the Church of Ireland located on St Mary's Place, Broadstone, Dublin. It is constructed from local calp limestone which takes on a dark hue when wet. This is the origin of the building's nickname. A chapel of ease is a church building, other than a parish church, that is located within the bounds of a parish for the convenience of those who cannot conveniently reach the main church. The parish's main church, now also deconsecrated, was St Mary's on Mary Street.
There was a St. Kevin's Church (Irish: Eaglais Naomh Caoimhín) in what is now St. Kevin's Park, Camden Row, Dublin, Ireland at least as far as the 13th century. After the Reformation, it became an Anglican church. The original church was replaced around 1750 by a new one, closed in 1912 and now in ruins. Both churches were dedicated to Kevin of Glendalough. There is also a Catholic St. Kevin's Church a short distance away on Harrington Street.
St. Luke's Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Naomh Lúcás), is a hospital in Rathgar, Dublin, Ireland which has specialised in treating cancer patients from throughout Ireland for over half a century. It is primary national centre for radiotherapy treatment.
website: http://stlukesnetwork.ie/locations-and-visiting/st.-lukes-hospital/map-and-directions.html
St Thomas's Church in Marlborough Street, Dublin was a Church of Ireland parish church. It was replaced by a new church, St. Thomas's Church, Cathal Brugha Street, Dublin, in 1930.
The Olivier Cornet Gallery (French pronunciation: [ɔlivje kɔʁnɛ]) is a contemporary commercial art gallery in Dublin, Ireland, owned and run by French-born Olivier Cornet.
website: https://www.oliviercornetgallery.com/
Southern Ireland (Irish: Deisceart Éireann, pronounced [dʲɛʃcəɾˠt̪ˠ ˈeːɾʲən̪ˠ]) was the larger of the two parts of Ireland that were created when Ireland was partitioned by the Government of Ireland Act 1920. It comprised 26 of the 32 counties of Ireland or about five-sixths of the area of the island, whilst the remaining six counties, which occupied most of Ulster in the north of the island, formed Northern Ireland.
Jameson () is a blended Irish whiskey produced by the Irish Distillers subsidiary of Pernod Ricard. Originally one of the six main Dublin whiskeys at the Jameson Distillery Bow St., Jameson is now distilled at the New Midleton Distillery in County Cork. It is by far the best-selling Irish whiskey in the world; in 2019, annual sales passed 8 million cases. It has been sold internationally since the early 19th century, and is available to buy in over 130 countries.
website: http://jamesonwhiskey.com
The Stardust fire was a fatal fire at the Stardust nightclub in Artane, Dublin, Ireland, in the early hours of 14 February (Saint Valentine's Day) 1981. More than 800 people were attending a disco there, of whom 48 died, and 214 were injured as a result of the fire; in later years suicides of survivors and family members were also linked to the event.
The Coombe (; Irish: An Com) is a historic street in the south inner city of Dublin, Ireland. It was originally a hollow or valley where a tributary of the River Poddle, the Coombe Stream or Commons Water, ran. The name is sometimes used for the broader area around, in which the Poddle and its related watercourses featured strongly.
The Discovery Programme: Centre for Archaeology and Innovation Ireland is an all-Ireland centre for archaeology and heritage research. It was established by the Irish Government in 1991. It is a company limited by guarantee, funded mainly through the Heritage Council. It has registered as a charity with the Charities Regulator.
website: http://www.discoveryprogramme.ie/
St John's parish, Clontarf is a parish of the Roman Catholic Church, serving part of Clontarf on the Northside of Dublin, Ireland.
Talbot Street (; Irish: Sráid Thalbóid) is a city-centre street located on Dublin's Northside, stretching from Amiens Street and bookended by Dublin Connolly railway station to North Earl Street, which acts as a continuation as far as the Spire of Dublin on Dublin's O'Connell Street.
The Gaiety School of Acting (GSA) is a drama school located on Essex Street West in Temple Bar, Dublin, Ireland. It was founded by theatre director Joe Dowling in 1986. Patrick Sutton, theatre director, was director of the Gaiety School of Acting for 30 years from 1993. As of 2024, the director and CEO is Will Wollen.
website: http://www.gaietyschool.com/
TOG is a hackerspace in Dublin, Ireland. tóg is a word in the Irish language; one of its meanings is 'to build or construct'.
website: http://www.tog.ie, https://www.tog.ie/
American College Dublin, a constituent college of Irish American University, is a private not-for-profit liberal arts institution accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education (MSCHE). Established in 1993 in Dublin Ireland, the institution is located in the center of Dublin on Merrion Square in a number of Georgian era houses, one of which is the childhood home of Oscar Wilde. In addition to its American accreditation with MSCHE, American College Dublin offers programs placed at level-eight and level-nine on the Irish National Framework of Qualifications which are accredited by the Irish body Quality and Qualifications Ireland (QQI) and for which graduating students receive QQI awards.
website: http://www.amcd.ie
St Mary's College C.S.Sp. (Congregatio Sancti Spiritus) is a voluntary boys' primary and secondary school run by the Congregation of the Holy Spirit and located in Rathmines, Dublin, Ireland. The school was founded in 1890, closed in 1916, and then reopened in 1926 (from 1917 until 1926 the St. Mary's operated as a House of Philosophy for the Spiritans, before it moved to Blackrock.). The school colours are blue and white.
website: https://sites.google.com/stmarys.ie/web/home/
St Patrick's College (Irish: Coláiste Phádraig), often known as St Pat's, was a third level institution in Ireland, the leading function of which was as the country's largest primary teacher training college, which had at one time up to 2,000 students. Founded in Drumcondra, in the northern suburbs of Dublin, in 1875, with a Roman Catholic ethos, it offered a number of undergraduate courses, primarily in primary education and arts, and in time postgraduate courses too, mostly in education and languages.
website: http://www.spd.dcu.ie/
Sydney Parade is a cricket ground in Dublin, Ireland. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1897, when Pembroke played Leicester Ivanhoe. In 1965, the ground hosted a first-class match between Ireland and Scotland, which resulted in a Scottish victory by an innings and 22 runs.
Sydney Parade Avenue (Irish: Ascaill Pharáid Sydney) Sandymount, Dublin 4, Ireland runs from the land formerly known as Ailesbury Park opposite the Merrion Centre at the Merrion Road end, to the sea of Dublin Bay at the Strand Road. Ailesbury Road joins Sydney Parade at the DART station known as Sydney Parade railway station, originally opened in January 1835. Other side roads off the avenue include
Tara Street (Irish: Sráid na Teamhrach) is a major traffic route in Dublin, Ireland, partly due to the current one-way traffic flow in the city centre.
The Village is a music venue situated next to Whelan's on Wexford Street, Dublin, Ireland. Formerly a nightclub owned by Mean Fiddler, in 2003 it was turned into a music venue. It has a large balcony and a capacity of 550.
Over the centuries, there have been five theatres in Dublin called the Theatre Royal.
The Black Dog was a prison in Newhall Market, now Cornmarket, in Dublin, Ireland. Built as a square tower and originally known as Browne's Castle, the site became a tavern and was in use as a prison from at least the 17th century. It was in use up until the late 18th century, when it was replaced by a number of new prisons, including Newgate Prison (built 1783) and a new Sheriff's Prison on Green Street (built 1794).
Cook Street (Irish: Sráid na gCócairí) is a street in Dublin running from Bridge Street to Winetavern Street, in the heart of Medieval Dublin.
The Dublin Corporation Wholesale Markets, or Victorian Fruit and Vegetable Market,(laterly the Dublin City Fruit and Vegetable Market) is a market located in the Smithfield area of Dublin in existence from the 6 December 1892 until its closure in 2019. At that point, legacy tenants received compensation and vacated the space to alternative premises to facilitate refurbishments and reopening as a retail and food focused market. In the months following the closure of the market, the onset of COVID-19 resulted in the suspension of the project and the temporary usage of the market to store building materials for nearby construction projects.
Marino House and gardens was a Georgian house and estate in Marino in the northern suburbs of Dublin, Ireland, constructed sometime around 1755 and later remodeled by Sir William Chambers for the 1st Earl of Charlemont. Chambers later also designed Charlemont House on nearby Rutland Square (now Parnell Square) for Lord Charlemont.
Killester Donnycarney Football Club is an Irish association football (soccer) club based in Killester, Dublin. Their senior men's team currently plays in the Senior Sunday Division of the Leinster Senior League.
St Anne's Road Pocket Park (Irish: Páirc Phóca Bóthar Naomh Anna) is a pocket park measuring 120 square metres (0.03 acres) located off St Anne's Road in the northside Dublin, Ireland suburb of Drumcondra. It is a community project, and a member of Dublin City Council's Public Participation Network (PPN).
Neale's Musick Hall, also known as Mr. Neal's New Musick Hall, the New Musick-Hall, Mr. Neale's Great Room, Neal's Musick Room, the Great Musick Hall, Mr. Neale's Great Musick Hall or the Fishamble Street Music Hall was a purpose-built music hall that existed on Fishamble Street in Dublin city centre, Ireland. It was built using subscriptions from a charitable organisation named 'The Charitable and Musical Society', and operated from 1741 until the mid-19th century. William Neale, a local musical instrument-maker and music publisher, was the secretary/treasurer of the society during the conception and construction phase of the project. The building is most notable for the premiere of Handel's Messiah which took place within it on the afternoon of 13 April 1742.
Fleet Street (Irish: Sráid na Toinne) is a street on the southside of Dublin, Ireland. Located in the Dublin 2 area, Fleet Street runs eastwards, parallel to the River Liffey, through Temple Bar, across Westmoreland Street to D'Olier Street.
The Georgian mile is an unofficial term used to describe a continuous, near mile-long thoroughfare largely lined with Georgian townhouses in Dublin, Ireland. It comprises Fitzwilliam Place, Fitzwilliam Square East, Fitzwilliam Street, and Merrion Square East, and was built between the 1780s and the 1830s.
The Mageough , is a 19th-century retirement home in Rathmines, southern Dublin, Ireland.
The Royal Hibernian Marine School, also known for a period as Mountjoy & Marine School, was a charity school in Dublin, Ireland established in 1766 to care for and educate the orphaned children of seamen. The school's building on Sir John Rogerson's Quay was in use as a school from 1773 until 1904 and continued to be used as offices and storage until the 1970s before being demolished in 1979.
Grattan Crescent Park (Irish: Páirc Corrán Grattan) is a public park located between the suburbs of Kilmainham and Inchicore in Dublin, Ireland. The park is bounded by Grattan Crescent road to the west and the River Camac to the east. The park closes at different times of day during the year, dependent on the hours of dusk.
College Street (Irish: Sráid an Choláiste) in Dublin follows the curve of Trinity College. It runs from College Green in the west to Pearse Street in the east. It lies in the "Mansion House A" Electoral Division of Dublin. It was described by the prolific engraver Mary Milner as "one of the most spacious of the noble thoroughfares of the Irish metropolis."
website: https://www.greenonredgallery.com/
St. Jude's Church, on the Inchicore Road, Kilmainham, in Dublin, Ireland, was a Church of Ireland (Anglican) church built between 1862 and 1864 to serve the community working in the nearby railway works, and serving the St. Jude's Parish, which included Goldenbridge, Kilmainham, and Inchicore.
The Italian Quarter (Irish: An Ceathrú Iodálach) is an unofficially-named private development on the north bank of the River Liffey in central Dublin, Ireland. The development comprises Bloom Lane, a pedestrianised alley, and the properties located along both sides of it, including an apartment complex known as Quartiere Bloom. In 2019, Italy Magazine named the area as one of the places to find "one of the more convincing approximations of mangiare all'italiana" in Dublin.
The owners of the furrier's shop J. M. Barnardo & Son in Dublin, Ireland, founded in 1812, already claimed the title of "oldest family of furriers in the world" in 1994.
The British Centre for Literary Translation (BCLT) is a research centre in the School of Literature, Drama and Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in Norwich, England. BCLT was founded in 1989 with a grant from the Arts Council by German writer and academic W. G. Sebald (18 May 1944 – 14 December 2001), who was Professor of European Literature at UEA.
website: https://www.uea.ac.uk/groups-and-centres/british-centre-for-literary-translation
Protests at several locations in Ireland started in early November 2022 after the development of sites in various parts of the country as temporary asylum seeker shelters by the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth (DCEDIY), as it attempted to accommodate the influx of 65,000 refugees during 2022. Protests were held in East Wall, Ballymun, Drimnagh and elsewhere in Dublin; Fermoy and Mallow in County Cork; Kill, County Kildare; Lismore, County Waterford; Mullingar, County Westmeath; Inch, County Clare; and Rosslare Harbour, County Wexford.
The Setanta Centre is a 9-storey office block with ground floor retail space in Nassau Street, Dublin, Ireland.
Earlsfort Terrace (Irish: Ardán Phort an Iarla) is a street in Dublin, Ireland which was laid out in the 1830s.
The Taipei Representative Office in Ireland represents the interests of Taiwan in Ireland in the absence of formal diplomatic relations, functioning as a de facto embassy in the absence of diplomatic relations, as Ireland adheres to the One China Policy.
website: https://www.roc-taiwan.org/ie/index.html, https://www.roc-taiwan.org/ie_en/index.html
Misery Hill (Irish: Cnoc na hAinnise) is a street in Dublin, Ireland, near Grand Canal Dock.
Lansdowne House is a 9-storey office block in Dublin, Ireland.
Harcourt Terrace (Irish: Ardán Fhearchair) is a Regency and Victorian terrace located in Dublin City, Ireland. It links the Grand Canal at Charlemont Place with Adelaide Road, near the National Concert Hall.
The Katherine Zappone controversy, also known as the Merrion Hotel controversy or Merrion Gate, was a political scandal in Ireland involving associates and former colleagues of former Minister for Children Katherine Zappone who attended an outdoor gathering at the Merrion Hotel in Dublin, on 21 July 2021, six days prior to her controversial appointment as UN special envoy.
Lincoln Place (Irish: Plás Lincoln) is a street in Dublin, Ireland.
The Blackpitts Mosque (Irish: Mosc na gCuithí Dubha) is a mosque in Dublin, Ireland. It has a Sunni orientation. It has a mostly Pakistani membership and is part of the Deobandi movement.
Queen Street (Irish: Sráid na Banríona) is a street in Dublin running from North King Street to Arran Quay.
Merchants' Hall (sometimes Merchants' Arch) is a former 19th century guildhall, now a protected structure, on Wellington Quay in Dublin, Ireland. It is located opposite the Ha'penny Bridge and backs on to Temple Bar. The building was the last of the city guildhalls to be constructed and operated as a guildhall for 20 years before the Dublin Guild Merchant ended its main work, along with other Guilds of the City of Dublin.
Boyne Street (Irish: Sráid na Bóinne) is a street in Dublin, Ireland.
River House was a 5-storey office block on Chancery Street, Dublin, Ireland. It was described as a "brutalist eyesore" by the Sunday Times.
Weavers' Hall was a guildhall at 14 The Coombe, Dublin, Ireland, which housed the Guild of Weavers (sometimes called the Guild of St Philip and St James or the Guild of the Blessed Virgin Mary), one of the 25 Guilds of the City of Dublin. The building was constructed in 1745 to a design by architect Joseph Jarratt to replace an earlier nearby weavers' guildhall in the Lower Coombe which was built in 1681–2 and was located in what was originally the Earl of Meath's Liberty. The building was demolished in 1965, with elements including furniture, fireplaces, door surrounds and stone floors sold off as scrap.
Beresford Place (Irish: Plás Beresford) is a crescent-shaped street in Dublin, Ireland, originally laid out as a crescent surrounding The Custom House in 1792 to the plan of James Gandon.
Countess Markiewicz House is a flats complex named after Countess Constance Markievicz in Dublin 2, Ireland. It was designed by Herbert George Simms in an art deco style and was constructed between 1934 and 1936. It is one of many examples of twentieth-century housing designed by Simms in Dublin and is listed on the record of protected structures.
Fenian Street (Irish: Sráid na bhFíníní) is a street in Dublin, Ireland.
The Irish criminal David Byrne was shot dead on 5 February 2016 at the Regency Hotel in Whitehall, Dublin, Ireland.
The Victorian Turkish baths, Dublin, Lincoln Place, were the first purpose-built Victorian Turkish baths in the Irish capital, opening on 2 February 1860.
Benburb Street (Irish: Sráid na Binne Boirbe) is a street on the northside of Dublin, Ireland.
The Imperial Hotel was a hotel in Dublin's principal thoroughfare, Sackville Street, until it was destroyed during the Easter Rising of 1916. The building comprised Clerys department store on the lower floors and the Imperial Hotel on upper floors situated opposite the General Post Office and Nelson's Pillar.
Cuffe Street (Irish: Sráid Mac Dhuibh or Sráid Cuffe) is a street in Dublin, Ireland which runs from St Stephen's Green at the eastern end to Kevin Street Lower at the western end.
Cathedral Street (Irish: Sráid na hArdeaglaise) is a street in central Dublin, Ireland, formerly known as Elephant Lane and Tyrone Place.
Werburgh Street (Irish: Sráid San Werburgh) is a street in the medieval area of Dublin, Ireland, named for St. Werburgh's Church.
High Street (Irish: An tSráid Ard) is a street in the medieval area of Dublin, Ireland.
Buckingham Street is a street in Dublin running from Summerhill to Amiens Street. It is divided into Buckingham Street Lower (south end) and Buckingham Street Upper (north end).
Bow Lane West (Irish: Lána na hUillinne Thiar) is a street in Dublin, Ireland.
Deli 613 is a kosher deli in Rathmines, Dublin, Ireland. It is located in the Chabad house building of the Chabad-Lubavitch of Ireland, which operates the deli. Opened in 2023, it is believed to be the first kosher eatery in Ireland since the 1960s.
Steeven's Lane (Irish: Lána Steevens) is a street or lane in central Dublin, Ireland. The street is solely for the use of Dublin's Luas trams, emergency services, pedestrians and bicycles. The lane was laid out in the late 1710s for the purposes of facilitating access to Dr Steevens' Hospital from James's Street.
James's Street (Irish: Sráid San Séamas) is a street in the Liberties area of central Dublin, Ireland. Originally the location of one of the medieval city gates of Dublin, St. James's Gate, it has been the home of St. James's Gate Brewery since the 18th century.
Fitzwilton House was a brutalist concrete and steel office block in Dublin, Ireland completed in 1969 and demolished in October 2018.
Wexford Street (Irish: Sráid Loch Garman) is a street in southern central Dublin, Ireland, that connects Aungier Street to Camden Street.
St. Teresa's Carmelite Church is a Catholic church on Clarendon Street in Dublin, Ireland. Originally accessed via Wicklow Street, there is an additional entrance off Johnson's Court near Grafton Street. First constructed in the late 18th century, the church was expanded and significant interior works were undertaken in the late 19th century. The church is run by friars of the Discalced Carmelite order.
D'Olier Street ( duh-LEER) is a restaurant in central Dublin, Ireland. It is owned by James Moore, Jane Frye and Anthony Smith; Moore is also executive chef. It is located in D'Olier Chambers, a Victorian building at the south end of D'Olier Street.
Golden Lane (Irish: Lána an Óir) is a street on the Southside of Dublin city. It runs from Bride Street in the west to Longford Street and Stephen Street in the east. It is intersected by Ship Street Great, Whitefriar Street and Chancery Lane.
The City Basin was a public reservoir and cistern constructed near St James' Street, Dublin around 1721 to supply the City of Dublin with water. It was later expanded by connection to the adjacent and newly completed Grand Canal Harbour from 1785.
Stephen Street (Irish: Sráid Stiabhna) is a street on the southside of Dublin, Ireland.
Belvidere House in Drumcondra, Dublin is a historic house now located within the grounds of St Patrick's College, Dublin, a constituent college of Dublin City University.
Ship Street Little (Irish: Sráid na gCaorach Bheag, meaning 'Sheep Street') is a street on the south side of Dublin, Ireland which stretches from the junction of Werburgh Street and Bride Street in the west to the corner with Ship Street Great and Cole's Alley in the east and is bookended by the Ship Street Gate of Dublin Castle in the east.
North Frederick Street (Irish: Sráid Fhreidric Thuaidh) is a Georgian street in Dublin, Ireland which connects Parnell Square East with Dorset Street. The street is intersected by Hardwicke Street and Gardiner Row.
The Embassy of the Philippines in Dublin is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of the Philippines to Ireland. It is located in central Dublin on Mount Street Upper within the Dublin 2 postal district, between St Stephen's Church and Merrion Square.
Street address: 37 Mount Street Upper (from Wikidata)
Thornton's was a restaurant that was housed, in the period 2002–2016, in the Fitzwilliam Hotel, St. Stephen's Green, County Dublin, Ireland. It was previously located on Portobello Road since 1989. It became a fine dining restaurant, that held a one-star Michelin rating in the periods 1996-2000 and 2006–2015. In the period 2001-2005 it held a two-star rating. The restaurant closed on 29 October 2016. The space is now occupied by Glovers Alley.
website: http://www.thorntonsrestaurant.com
Thomas Street (Irish: Sráid Thomáis) is a street in The Liberties in central Dublin, Ireland.
Wicklow Street (Irish: Sráid Chill Mhantáin) is an established shopping street located in Dublin city centre, running from Grafton Street in the east to the junction of Exchequer Street, South William Street and Andrew's Street in the west.
Tritonville Road (Irish: Bóthar Tritonville), Sandymount, Dublin 4, is connected to Lansdowne Road by both Herbert Road and Newbridge Avenue. At its southern end, it meets Serpentine Avenue. The northern side of Tritonville Road is considered to be part of Irishtown by the locals even though the postcode is Sandymount.
Wheatfield Place of Detention (Irish: Príosún Pháirc na Cruithneachta) is a closed, medium security prison located on Cloverhill Road, Clondalkin, Dublin 22. It receives male prisoners of 17 years of age and older from the counties of Louth, Meath, Monaghan, Wexford and Wicklow. It has a bed capacity of 430 and in 2009 the average daily number of inmates resident was 426.
The Crab of Dublin, also known as Revolver, was a transportable Ferris wheel installation in the Dublin Docklands in the North Wall area of Dublin, Ireland. Commissioned by Harry Crosbie and operated by World Tourist Attractions, it opened to the public in July 2010 and was closed and dismantled 16 months later in November 2011.
The Westmoreland Lock Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Loc Westmoreland) was a hospital for venereal disease originally located at Donnybrook and later moved to Lazar's Hill (now Townsend Street), Dublin, Ireland.
Westmoreland Street (Irish: Sráid Westmoreland) is a street on the Southside of Dublin. It is currently a one-way street. It carries a segment of the R138 road for northbound traffic; nearby D'Olier Street carries southbound traffic of that segment.
The U2 Tower was a cancelled skyscraper which was proposed to be constructed in Dublin, Ireland. The site proposed was in the South Docklands (SODO) campshires, at the corner of Sir John Rogerson's Quay and Britain Quay, by the confluence of the River Liffey, the River Dodder, and the Grand Canal. The design announced on 12 October 2007 was by Foster + Partners. Reports suggested a building height of 120 metres, "well over 120 metres", and 180 metres, any of which would have made it the tallest building on the island of Ireland. The building was planned to be an apartment building, with a recording studio owned by the rock group U2 in a "pod" at the top. Construction was to begin in 2008 and end in 2011, at a cost of €200m. In October 2008, the project was cancelled because of the economic downturn at the time. Proposals to revive the plan were reported in July 2013. However, they did not come to fruition and the 79-metre, 22-storey Capital Dock development has since been built on the site.
Westland Row (Irish: Rae an Iarthair) is a street on the Southside of Dublin, Ireland.
Merrion Road (Irish: Bóthar Mhuirfean) is a major road, part of the R118, in Dublin 4.
The Volta Electric Theatre (later renamed the Lyceum Picture Theatre) was a film theatre in Dublin and was Ireland's first dedicated cinema. The site at 45 Mary Street was later demolished and is occupied today by a department store.
Street address: 45 Mary Street, Dublin 1 (from Wikidata)
Trinity Church, Dublin, also called the Protestant Episcopal Church, was a Church of Ireland church on Gardiner Street in Dublin, Ireland, the building of which began in 1838. It closed around 1909 and was reopened in the 2000s by an independent Christian group.
The Millennium Clock was a six-ton installation designed by Grainne Hassett and Vincent Ducatez to celebrate the passing of the millennium, sponsored by the National Lottery. It took the form of a digital seven-segment display counting down the number of seconds to the year 2000 submerged under the surface of the River Liffey on the west side of O'Connell Bridge in Dublin city centre. It was turned on in March 1996 but suffered from technical problems, including becoming obscured by mud and algae. It was ultimately removed in December of the same year. These issues resulted in the clock being referred to as the "Time in the Slime" or the "Chime in the Slime".
The Royal Military Infirmary (RMI) is a hospital in Dublin, on the southeastern edge of Phoenix Park (Páirc an Fhionnuisce), one of several former British military installations in the area. The hospital buildings are now part of the Irish Department of Defence's (An Roinn Cosanta) estate and currently houses Ireland's Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (Oifig an Stiúrthóra Ionchúiseamh Poiblí - ODPP). The bulk of the British Army's medical services in Dublin were transferred from the RMI to a new hospital at Arbour Hill in Dublin in 1913. The Infirmary buildings are protected as they are nationally significant architecture.
Hawkins House was a 12-storey office block in Dublin, Ireland. It was demolished in 2021.
St. Barnabas' Church was a Church of Ireland church on Upper Sherrif Street, East Wall, in Dublin's docklands. It was sometimes called the Mariners Church.
St. Thomas's Church, is a Church of Ireland church on Cathal Brugha Street, Dublin.
The Garden of Remembrance (Irish: An Gairdín Cuimhneacháin) is a memorial garden in Belfast, Northern Ireland, dedicated to the Irish Republican Army members killed during The Troubles, as well as civilians and deceased ex-prisoners. It is located on the Falls Road, which has historically been a predominantly Irish Republican area during the conflict.
Episcopal Chapel and Asylum for Penitent Females, was Protestant "Magdalene" asylum for "fallen women" and an Episcopal Chapel on Upper Baggot Street in Dublin. It was located on the corner of Baggot Street Upper and Waterloo Road in Dublin. The asylum could accommodate 50 penitent women and the chapel could accommodate 1,200 worshipers, it was run by a committee of benevolent donors.
Plunket Street Meeting House, Dublin was, in succession, the site of two protestant congregations, first a Presbyterian Church, then an independent reformed evangelical church. Plunket Street once stood where John Dillon Street and Thomas Davis Street now stand. It was situated between Patrick's Street and Francis Street.
The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions is the principal public agency for conducting criminal prosecutions in the Republic of Ireland. It is led by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP).
Dublin Female Penitentiary was a reform institution for "fallen women" in Dublin, Ireland. It was established in 1810 and opened in 1813. It was run by the Church of Ireland and located between Berkeley Road, Eccles Street and North Circular Road. The institution could cater for over 40 inmates.
South Great George's Street (Irish: Sráid Sheoirse Mhór Theas) is a street in south-central Dublin, Ireland.
North Great George's Street (Irish: Sráid Mór Seóirse Thuaidh) is a street on the Northside of Dublin city first laid out in 1766 which connects Parnell Street with Great Denmark Street. It consists of opposing terraces of 4-storey over basement red-brick Georgian townhouses descending on an increasingly steep gradient from Belvedere House which bookends the street from a perpendicular aspect to the North.
Christchurch Place (Irish: Plás Theampall Chríost) is a street in central Dublin, Ireland, formerly known as Skinners Row or Skinner's Row, it formed one of the main thoroughfares in medieval Dublin.
St. Patrick's Church is a Roman Catholic church in Ringsend, Dublin.
website: https://stpatrickschurchringsend.com/
The Bust of Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio is a marble sculpture by an unknown artist active in Rome in the 1630s. It was formerly attributed to the Flemish sculptor François Duquesnoy. It was realized after 1638, possibly around 1641, and is currently housed at the National Gallery of Ireland.
Langrishe Place, Methodist Chapel or Langrishe Hall was a Methodist Chapel established in Langrishe Place, Summerhill, Dublin, it was to provide a place for the congregation from the Free Church, Great Charles Street, Dublin (called the Wesley Chapel), which was too big for their numbers, and the congregation were unable to clear the debt on the Charles St. church. Originally set up in a rented premise in Langrishe Place in 1825, enlarged in 1830, the premises along with two houses were purchased and the chapel was rebuilt in 1835.
Street address: 10 Langrishe Place, Dublin 1 (from Wikidata)
The Scots Presbyterian Church is a ruined former church on Seán McDermott Street (formerly Gloucester Street North or Gloucester Street Lower) in Dublin 1, Ireland. The church was designed in a Greek revival style by architect Duncan Campbell Ferguson and completed in 1846 at a cost of £1,800.
Aungier Street (Irish: Sráid Aungier) is a street on the south side of Dublin, Ireland. It runs north-south as a continuation of South Great George's Street.
Apollo House was a 9-storey office block in Tara Street, Dublin, Ireland.
Hawkins Street (Irish: Sráid Hawkins) is a street in central Dublin, Ireland. It runs south from Rosie Hackett Bridge, at its junction with Burgh Quay, for 160 metres (170 yd) to a crossroads with Townsend Street, where it continues as College Street.
Street address: Hawkins Street, Dublin (from Wikidata)
The All Island Institute of Public Health is an all-island organisation supporting the development of public health policy in Ireland and Northern Ireland.
Street address: 700 South Circular Road, Dublin 8, Ireland D08 NH90; Eagle Star House, 5-7 Upper Queen St, Belfast BT1 6FB (from Wikidata)
website: https://instituteofpublichealth.org/
The Oscar Wilde Centre is an academic research and teaching unit in Trinity College Dublin. It was founded in 1998, and is located at 21 Westland Row, the house in which Oscar Wilde was born. This building, which is on the perimeter of Trinity, was purchased in the 20th century as part of an expansion programme. The centre offers two post-graduate programmes: the MPhil in Irish writing, and another in creative writing – the first programme of its kind in Ireland. The centre was founded by the poets Brendan Kennelly and Gerald Dawe, who serves as the director. Richard Ford, a Pulitzer Prize-winning American writer, joined the staff in 2008 as an adjunct professor.
St Declan's School is a primary school in the Ballsbridge area of Dublin, close to the Aviva Stadium. It differs from other schools in the area because it was created by the Society of Jesus (with the Archbishop of Dublin), to offer specialised education for pupils with mild emotional and behavioural difficulties.
website: http://www.stdeclans.ie/
Independent College Dublin is a college in Dublin, Ireland which offers courses at certificate, diploma, degree, and postgraduate levels, along with professional development courses. Independent College Dublin was established in Dublin in 2007.
website: http://www.independentcolleges.ie
The Irish Architectural Archive was established in 1976 by Dr Edward McParland and Nicholas Robinson as the National Trust Archive with its objective being to collect and preserve material of every kind relating to the architecture of Ireland, and make it available to the public. It is based at 45 Merrion Square, Dublin, and is an independent private company with charitable status. The repository serves as the main collection of diverse materials pertaining to Irish architecture.
Street address: 45 Merrion Square, Dublin 2, Ireland (from Wikidata)
website: https://iarc.ie/
The Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC) is the national high-performance computing centre in Ireland. It was established in 2005 and provides supercomputing resources, support, training and related services. ICHEC is involved in education and training, including providing courses for researchers.
website: http://www.ichec.ie/
North Strand Road (Irish: Bóthar na Trá Thuaidh) is a street in the Northside of Dublin, Ireland. It is part of the North Strand area. It links the city centre from Connolly Station to Fairview by road.
Marrowbone Lane (Irish: Lána Mhuire Mhaith) is a street off Cork Street on the south side of Dublin, Ireland.
Pearse Street (Irish: Sráid an Phiarsaigh) is a major street in Dublin. It runs from College Street in the west to MacMahon Bridge in the east, and is one of the city's longest streets. It has several different types of residential and commercial property along its length.
The Claremont Institution for the Deaf and Dumb at Glasnevin, Dublin, was the first school for the Deaf in Ireland. It was established in 1816 by Dr. Charles Orpen. In the institution it provided structured educational support for the Deaf community by including vocational training and religious instruction. Over time, Claremont became an accredited school that gave broad recognition to Deaf culture and their human rights in the country of Ireland.
The Campanile of Trinity College Dublin is a bell tower and one of its most iconic landmarks. Donated by then Archbishop of Armagh, Lord John Beresford it was designed by Sir Charles Lanyon, sculpted by Thomas Kirk and finished in 1853.
The Augustinian Friary of the Most Holy Trinity was an Augustinian Roman Catholic Priory, founded c. 1259, by the family of Talbot on the south bank of the river, near what is now Crow Street, Dublin. At the time the priory was built, it was just outside of the city walls. The Friary most likely followed the design of the parent priory Clare Priory in the town of Clare, Suffolk. The Friary was suppressed in 1540 when it was described as a "church with belfry, a hall and dormitory". The friars continued to operate in secret within the city and there are several mentions of them in the city archives until the late 1700s when they consecrated a new church.
Seomra Spraoi (English: Play Room) was a self-managed social centre in Dublin, Ireland which first opened in 2004 and closed in 2015. It was run on a not-for-profit basis by an anti-capitalist collective with anarchist principles.
The Museum of Irish Industry, founded in 1854, originally an extension of the Museum of Economic Geology, was a museum dedicated to the exhibition of the various, display-worthy materials from, and donated by, the industries of mining and manufacturing established in Ireland. In addition, the museum gave lectures on the subject, and related subject matters, to the general public.
The Manor of St. Sepulchre (also known as the Archbishop's Liberty) was one of several manors, or liberties, that existed in Dublin, Ireland since the arrival of the Anglo-Normans in the 12th century. They were townlands united to the city, but still preserving their own jurisdiction. St. Sepulchre's was under the jurisdiction of the Archbishop of Dublin, although from time to time the Dublin city government claimed ownership of it.
Ely Place ( Irish: Plás Íle) is a street in central Dublin with Georgian architecture. It is a continuation of Upper Merrion Street and the place where Lower Baggot Street and Merrion Row meet. Both the latter and Hume Street link it to St Stephen's Green.
The Irish Real Tennis Association (Cumann Leadóige na h-Éireann) encourages the preservation and development of the game and facilities of real tennis in the Republic of Ireland.
National College of Ireland (NCI) (Coláiste Náisiúnta na hÉireann (CNÉ) in Irish) is a not-for-profit, state-aided third-level education institution in Dublin. It was founded in 1951 as a joint venture between the Jesuits in Ireland and Irish trade unions, and was originally named the Catholic Workers College, Dublin. It is now an independent higher education institution, offering full and part-time courses from undergraduate to postgraduate level, in the areas of business, computing, psychology and education.
website: http://www.ncirl.ie
The Pearse Street fire was a conflagration in Pearse Street, Dublin on 5 October 1936, in which three firemen died. The fire began at No.163 Pearse Street sometime after 8.30 pm and spread next door to No.164. The alarm was raised at 10.50 pm and the Dublin Fire Brigade from the Tara Street station arrived on the scene at 11.12, ensured the buildings were evacuated and began fighting the blaze. The water pressure at the nearest fire hydrants was inadequate and three firemen went onto the flat roof of No.165 while colleagues connected their hose to a farther hydrant. While they waited, two explosions were caused by the fire igniting cylinders of coal gas and oxygen stored at No.163 by a company which manufactured car batteries. This engulfed the three men and strengthened the blaze, which burned itself out the following morning. The bodies of the firemen were recovered that evening; they had died of carbon monoxide poisoning. A tribunal of inquiry was established by order of the Oireachtas, which criticised the fire brigade supervisors, the water company, and the battery company. The cause of the initial fire was not established; the inquiry ruled out arson and felt a discarded cigarette was the most likely explanation.
Store Street (Irish: Sráid an Stórais) is a short street in Dublin, Ireland, running from Amiens Street at right angles to Beresford Place.
website: http://www.garda.ie
The GAA Hall of Fame is the hall of fame for Gaelic games in Ireland. The hall opened in the Cusack Stand, Croke Park, Dublin, on 11 February 2013, with 32 inaugural inductees.
The Rubrics is the oldest building within Trinity College Dublin. Although the exact date is unknown, it was designed and built in c.1700. Today, the Rubrics are used as rooms for students and fellows.
The National Children's Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Náisiúnta na Leanaí) was a children's teaching hospital in Dublin, Ireland. It was absorbed into the Tallaght Hospital in June 1998.
website: https://www.tuh.ie/Children-s-Services/
McKee Barracks (Irish: Dún Mhic Aoidh) is a military installation situated on Blackhorse Avenue near Phoenix Park in Cabra, Dublin, Ireland.
Eccles Street (Irish: Sráid Eccles) is a Georgian street in Dublin, Ireland.
The Dublin Institute of Technology (DIT) School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (SEEE) was the largest and one of the longest established Schools of Electrical and Electronic Engineering in Ireland. It was located at the DIT Kevin Street Campus in Dublin City, as part of the College of Engineering & Built Environment (CEBE).
website: http://www.dit.ie/electricalelectronicengineering/
Dust Storm (Manter, Kansas) is a 3D digital simulation work of art, by John Gerrard.
Westland Studios was a recording studio located in Dublin, Ireland. Originally established in 1976 as Lombard Sound, the studio was refurbished and renamed Westland Studio in 1985. It closed in 2018.
Great Denmark Street (Irish: Sráid na Danmhairge Mhór) is a Georgian street in Dublin, Ireland. It leads from Parnell Square to Mountjoy Square and is crossed by Temple Street/Hill Street, and forms part of Gardiner Row.
"We Are Not Afraid campaign," NYC subways is a ciba-chrome print by Irish-American artist Les Levine taken in 1981.
Radharc Films, also known as the Radharc Trust, is an Irish charity which oversees the film archive of the Radharc series of documentary programs. The organisation is based in Blackrock in Dublin, Ireland. The archive, overseen by the trust, includes a collection of over 400 topical and religious documentaries spanning over 30 years.
website: http://www.radharcfilms.com/
The R139 road is a regional road in Ireland, located in the northeast of Dublin. Until 2012, a portion of the current route was part of the now defunct N32 road.
Winetavern Street (Irish: Sráid an Fhíona) is a street in the medieval area of Dublin, Ireland.
The National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC, Irish: An Lárionad Náisiúnta Cibearshlándála) is a government computer security organisation in Ireland, an operational arm of the Department of Justice, Home Affairs and Migration. The NCSC was developed in 2013 and formally established by the Irish government in July 2015. It is responsible for Ireland's cyber security, with a primary focus on securing government networks, protecting critical national infrastructure, and assisting businesses and citizens in protecting their own systems. The NCSC incorporates the Computer Security Incident Response Team (CSIRT-IE).
website: https://www.ncsc.gov.ie/
North Earl Street (Irish: Sráid an Iarla Thuaidh) is a short stretch of city-centre street located on Dublin's Northside and formerly a major shopping area. It runs from Marlborough Street in the west to O'Connell Street beside the Spire.
website: http://www.visionsdrama.com
The Berry Dress is a 1994 mixed media sculpture by Alice Maher.
Saddle is a 1993 surrealist sculpture by Irish artist Dorothy Cross. It is in the collection of the Irish Museum of Modern Art having been acquired in 1994. It is created by the combination of found objects - specifically a metal frame, a horse's saddle and an upturned cow's udder. Virgin's Shroud, another work by Cross from 1993, also features cow's udders and is in the collection of the Tate.
The Embassy of the United Kingdom in Dublin is the chief diplomatic mission of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in Ireland. Its chancery is located on Merrion Road in the Ballsbridge area of the city. The current British Ambassador to Ireland is Kara Owen.
website: https://www.gov.uk/government/world/organisations/british-embassy-dublin/
The Ha'Penny Bridge Dublin is a watercolour, of the Ha'Penny Bridge, by Samuel Frederick Brocas, from 1818.
The Debtors' Prison Dublin is a historic debtors' prison in Dublin’s north inner city, between Halston Street and Green Street. While it is listed on Dublin City Council's Record of Protected Structures, it was also included on the list of 'Top 10 Most-at-Risk' buildings, published by An Taisce in 2021. It is adjacent to Green Street Courthouse.
Four Element Composition is a gouache on paper by Mainie Jellett from 1930.
The Embassy of Sweden in Dublin is Sweden's diplomatic mission in Ireland. When Ireland became independent, Sweden was one of the countries that early established diplomatic relations with Ireland. The embassy has its origins in the legation that was opened in 1946, which in turn has its origins in the Swedish consulate that was opened in 1926. The embassy closed in 2010 and reopened in 2023.
Anne Street South (Irish: Sráid Anna Theas) is a street on the southern side of central Dublin, Ireland, running from Grafton Street to Dawson Street.
Gareth Hutch was shot dead in Dublin on Tuesday 24 May 2016. He was a nephew of Gerry Hutch. He was also a cousin of Gary Hutch and a nephew of Eddie Hutch Snr.
The Institute of Archaeologists of Ireland (Irish: Institiúid Seandálaithe na hÉireann) is an Irish archaeology organisation based in Dublin, Ireland. Founded in Merrion Square, Dublin in August 2001, the organisation represents professional archaeologists who are working in the island of Ireland, both in the Republic of Ireland and in Northern Ireland.
Cherry Orchard (Irish: Gort na Silíní) is a suburb and townland within South Dublin, Ireland. It is located near Ballyfermot, Inchicore, Drimnagh, Kilmainham, Clondalkin and Lucan.
The Dublin Whiskey Distillery Company Jones Road Distillery, also known as the D.W.D. Distillery, Jones Road, or just Jones Road Distillery, was one of the six great Irish whiskey distilleries of Dublin city visited and documented by Alfred Barnard in his seminal 1887 publication "The Whisky Distilleries of the United Kingdom". It was located on the north side of the city on the banks of the River Tolka, approximately a mile north of the city centre. The distillery was built by the Dublin Whiskey Distillery Company Ltd and the Irish whiskey produced sold around the world under the brand name D.W.D.
The Thomas Street Distillery was an Irish whiskey distillery located in Dublin, Ireland. At its peak, it was Dublin's largest and most productive distillery and with an output of over 2 million gallons per annum, twice that of John Jameson's acclaimed nearby Bow Street distillery.
Michael Barr (died 25 April 2016) was a 35-year-old Irishman who was shot dead in a pub in Dublin as part of the Hutch–Kinahan feud. Four people have been convicted of his murder.
The Marrowbone Lane Distillery was an Irish whiskey distillery located on Marrowbone Lane, in Dublin, Ireland. One of the "big four" historical Dublin whiskey firms, it was run by William Jameson, a member of the Jameson whiskey dynasty. However, the whiskey now known as Jameson Irish Whiskey was not produced at this distillery, but at the separate enterprise run by John Jameson at the nearby Bow Street Distillery. The distillery closed in 1923 following financial difficulties.
Saint Ultan's Children's Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Leanaí Naomh Ultan) was a paediatric hospital in Dublin, Ireland. It was named after Ultan of Ardbraccan, patron saint of paediatricians.
Coolock (Irish: An Chúlóg) is one of the baronies of Ireland. It was constituted as part of the old county of Dublin. Today, it covers much of the northern parts of the city of Dublin and the south-eastern part of the modern county of Fingal. At the heart of the barony is the civil parish of the same name - Coolock - which is one of twenty civil parishes in the barony.
Foróige is an Irish organisation whose purpose is "to enable young people to involve themselves consciously and actively in their development and in the development of society". Macra na Tuaithe, the youth branch of Macra na Feirme, was formed on 14 March 1952 (1952-03-14). In 1981, the organisation changed its name to Foróige, derived from forbairt na hóige, which means "development of youth".
In the early hours of 31 August 2000, Brian Murphy, an 18-year-old student, was attacked by a large group of young men outside the Club Anabel nightclub at the Burlington Hotel in Dublin, Ireland. He died shortly after the attack. The subsequent investigations drew great media interest, with the incident commonly referred to as the Club Anabel case.
The Equitation School (Irish: An Scoil Eachaíochta) is an installation of the Defence Forces. It is based at McKee Barracks in the Phoenix Park in Dublin.
Northumberland Road (Irish: Bóthar Northumberland) is a Victorian street in Ballsbridge, Dublin, Ireland first laid out in the 1830s.
The Mental Health Commission is an independent body formed in 2002. Its functions were established by the Mental Health Act 2001 to regulate and inspect mental health services in Ireland. It is (also set down by the Act) the facilitator of the Mental health tribunal system in Ireland. The Commission appoints the panel members which sit on tribunals.
website: https://www.mhcirl.ie/
Broadstone railway works or simply Broadstone or the Broadstone was the headquarters for mechanical engineering and rolling stock maintenance for Midland Great Western Railway (MGWR). The complex grew around the Dublin Broadstone railway terminus.
The Irish Heart Foundation (IHF) is a charity founded in 1966 based in Dublin that support groups for patients who have had heart problems or strokes and campaigns on public health issues which affect the risk of heart disease and stroke. In 1992, the IHF and the Irish Cancer Society co-founded ASH Ireland to promote smoking cessation.
website: https://www.irishheart.ie/
The Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation (officially the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes and certain related matters) was a judicial commission of investigation, established in 2015 by the Irish government to investigate deaths and misconduct during the 20th century in mother and baby homes—institutions, most run by Catholic religious nuns, where unwed women were sent to deliver their babies. It was set up following statements that the bodies of up to 800 babies and children may have been interred in an unmarked mass grave in the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home, located in Tuam, County Galway. Its remit additionally covered investigation into the records of and the practices at an additional thirteen Mother and Baby Homes. The members of the three-person Commission were Judge Yvonne Murphy (chairperson), Dr William Duncan and Professor Mary E. Daly.
website: http://mbhcoi.ie
The Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC) (Irish: Lárionad Faire um Chosaint Sláinte) is part of Ireland's Health Service Executive.
Street address: 25-27 Middle Gardiner Street, Dublin 1, Ireland, D01 A4A3 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.hpsc.ie/
The 77th World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon), also known as Dublin 2019—An Irish Worldcon, was held on 15–19 August 2019 at the Convention Centre, as well as in The Point Square, Dublin, Ireland.
website: https://dublin2019.com/
The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) (Irish: Údarás Fuinnimh Inmharthana na hÉireann) is an Irish governmental body established to promote and aid in the development of sustainable energy in Ireland.
website: http://www.seai.ie/
Bride Street (Irish: Sráid Bhríde) is a street in the medieval area of Dublin, Ireland.
Parliament Street (Irish: Sráid na Pairliminte) is a street located on Dublin's Southside. It runs from the junction of Dame Street and Cork Hill on its southern end to the junction of Essex Quay and Wellington Quay on its northern end where it joins directly onto Grattan Bridge and subsequently Capel Street.
The British Embassy in Dublin at 39 Merrion Square was destroyed by arson on 2 February 1972. This occurred during demonstrations outside the chancery by a large crowd (estimates vary between 20,000 and 100,000 people), due to their outrage and animosity against the British government following the Bloody Sunday massacre in Derry on 30 January 1972, when the British Army's Parachute Regiment shot dead 14 unarmed Catholic civilians during a civil rights demonstration.
Dublin Institute of Technology (DIT, Irish: Institiúid Teicneolaíochta Bhaile Átha Cliath) was a major third-level institution in Dublin, Ireland. On 1 January 2019 DIT was dissolved and its functions were transferred to the Technological University Dublin, as TU Dublin City Campus. The institution began with the establishment of the first technical education institution in Ireland, in 1887, and progressed through various legal and governance models, culminating in autonomy under a statute of 1992.
website: https://www.tudublin.ie/
Clyde Road (Irish: Bóthar Chluaidh) runs from Wellington Place to a junction with Elgin Road in Ballsbridge. It meets Raglan Road and Wellington Road.
The Cork Street Fever Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Fiabhrais Shráid Chorcaí), also known as the House of Recovery, was a hospital located in Cork Street in Dublin, Ireland.
Castle Avenue Cricket Ground, also known as Clontarf Cricket Club Ground, is a cricket facility in the suburb of Clontarf, Dublin, Ireland. It is the primary of the two grounds of Clontarf Cricket Club, the secondary being at Mount Temple Comprehensive School, and the lands on which it lies are also home to two rugby union pitches belonging to Clontarf FC. The ground is one of only four One Day International grounds on the island of Ireland.
The Parish of St. John the Baptist, the Church of Ireland Parish of Clontarf, Dublin is a religious community located on the north shore of Dublin Bay, bounded by the Parishes of North Strand to the west, Coolock to the north, and Raheny to the east (the latter two are in a Union).
Cloverhill Prison (Irish: Príosún Chnoc na Seamar) is a remand prison in Dublin, Ireland. It is on Cloverhill Road, Clondalkin, Dublin 22. It has a bed capacity of 431 and its average daily number of inmates in 2022 was 424.
Cork Street (Irish: Sráid Chorcaí) runs from the junction of The Coombe to Donore Avenue.
The Embassy of Greece in Ireland is the diplomatic mission of Greece in Ireland. It is located in the capital of Ireland, Dublin.
Street address: 1 Upper Pembroke Street (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.mfa.gr/missionsabroad/ireland.html
Clonturk (Irish: Cluain Torc - Meadow of the boars) is an area on the Northside of Dublin, in Ireland. It is located in the south of the suburb of Drumcondra, just north of the River Tolka, but previously, Clonturk had been an alternative name for Drumcondra and the wider area. Clonturk lies within the Dublin 9 postal district. There is some evidence that the name originally was Ceann Torc or the 'headland of the boars', but had changed to Clonturk by the middle of the 16th century, perhaps under the influence of the more famous neighbouring placename Clontarf. The civil parish of Clonturk is part of the barony of Coolock.
Edenmore (Irish: Éadan Mór) is a locality and townland within Raheny on the Northside of Dublin, Ireland, with several housing developments and a mid-size municipal park. It lies within the Dublin 5 postal district.
LAU (local administrative unit): IE02050, 02050
The Apostolic Nunciature to Ireland the diplomatic mission of the Holy See to Ireland. It is located in Dublin. The position of Apostolic Nuncio is currently Luis Mariano Montemayor.
Street address: 183 Navan Road (from Wikidata)
Seán McDermott Street (Irish: Sráid Sheáin Mhic Dhiarmada) is a street in northeast Dublin, Ireland. It is divided into Seán McDermott Street Lower (east end) and Seán McDermott Street Upper (west end).
Tyrone House is a Georgian Palladian style mansion townhouse built for Marcus Beresford, 1st Earl of Tyrone in 1740. It was constructed on lands bordering Marlborough Street in what was to become a fashionable part of North Dublin city off Sackville Street. It was one of the first substantial aristocratic houses built on the North side of Dublin city.
The Treasury Building is an office block and historic site at the corner of Grand Canal Street Lower and Macken Street in Dublin.
Street address: Treasury Building, Grand Canal Street, Dublin 2 (from Wikidata)
South William Street, (Irish: Plás Mhic Liam Theas) is a street located on Dublin's Southside.
St Anthony's Hall (Irish: Halla Naomh Antaine), previously known as St Anthony's Parish Church (Irish: Eaglais Pharóiste Naomh Antaine) and, before that, Contarf Town Hall (Irish: Halla an Bhaile Cluain Tarbh) is a former ecclesiastical building and, before that, municipal building in Clontarf Road, Clontarf, Dublin, Ireland. It is now used as a parish hall for St Anthony's Parish Church.
Street address: 61 Clontarf Road (from Wikidata)
Founded in 2013, Shaw Academy is a privately owned online education organisation based in Dublin, Ireland.
website: http://www.shawacademy.com/
Na Gaeil Óga, CLG are a Dublin GAA, Irish-speaking Gaelic football, hurling and camogie club based in St. Catherines Park, Lucan and Phoenix Park, County Dublin founded in 2010. An underage structure was founded in 2014 catering for girls and boys in hurling, camogie and football.
Scoil Uí Chonaill is a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in Dublin, Ireland.
Parnells GAA or Parnells Gaelic Athletic Association club Gaelic football club was a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in Coolock, Dublin, Ireland. It was founded in 1893, named after the recently deceased Charles Stewart Parnell, and at that time was known as Parnell Volunteers. Parnells won the Dublin senior football championship on six occasions, in 1913, 1916, 1939, 1945 and most recently in 1987, 1988. Following financial mismanagement the club entered liquidation and was wound up in January 2025.
Iarnród Éireann, (Irish: [ˈiəɾˠnˠɾˠoːd̪ˠ ˈeːɾʲən̪ˠ]) or Irish Rail, is the operator of the national railway network of Ireland. Established on 2 February 1987, it is a subsidiary of Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ). It operates all internal InterCity, Commuter, DART and freight railway services in the Republic of Ireland, and, jointly with Northern Ireland Railways, the Enterprise service between Dublin and Belfast. In 2025, IÉ carried a record peak of 55 million passengers.
website: https://www.irishrail.ie/
Guinness () is a stout that originated in the brewery of Arthur Guinness at St. James's Gate, Dublin, Ireland, in the 18th century. It is now owned by the British multinational alcoholic beverage maker Diageo. It is one of the most successful alcohol brands worldwide, brewed in almost 50 countries, and available in over 120. Sales in 2011 amounted to 850,000,000 litres (190,000,000 imp gal; 220,000,000 U.S. gal). It is the highest-selling beer in both Ireland and the United Kingdom.
website: https://www.guinness.com/
World Rugby is the governing body for the sport of rugby union. World Rugby organises the Rugby World Cup every four years, the sport's most recognised and most profitable competition. It also organises a number of other international competitions, such as the World Rugby Sevens Series, the Rugby World Cup Sevens, the World Under 20 Championship, and the Pacific Nations Cup.
website: https://www.world.rugby
Raidió Teilifís Éireann (pronounced [ˈɾˠadʲiːoː ˈtʲɛlʲəfʲiːʃ ˈeːɾʲən̪ˠ] ; Irish for 'Radio [and] Television of Ireland'; RTÉ) is an Irish public service broadcaster. It produces and broadcasts programmes on television, radio and online. The radio service began on 1 January 1926, with regular television broadcasts beginning on 31 December 1961, making it one of the oldest continuously operating public service broadcasters in the world. It is headquartered in Donnybrook in Dublin, with offices across Ireland.
website: https://www.rte.ie/
Bank of Ireland Group plc (Irish: Banc na hÉireann) is a commercial bank operation in Ireland and one of the traditional Big Four Irish banks. Historically the premier banking organisation in Ireland, the bank occupies a unique position in Irish banking history. At the core of the modern-day group is the old Governor and Company of the Bank of Ireland, the ancient institution established by royal charter in 1783.
website: https://www.bankofireland.com/
Afilias, Inc. was a US corporation that was the registry operator of the .info, .mobi and .pro top-level domain, service provider for registry operators of .org, .ngo, .lgbt, .asia, .aero, and a provider of domain name registry services for countries around the world, including .MN (Mongolia), .AG (Antigua and Barbuda), .AU (Australia), .BM (Bermuda), .BZ (Belize), .AC (Ascension Island), .GI (Gibraltar), .IO (British Indian Ocean Territory) .ME (Montenegro), .PR (Puerto Rico), .SC (the Seychelles), .SH (Saint Helena), and .VC (St. Vincent and the Grenadines). Afilias also provided ancillary support to other domains, including .SG (Singapore), .LA (Laos), and .HN (Honduras). It was merged into Identity Digital in 2022.
website: https://afilias.info, https://afilias.info/china
An Óige (Irish: [ənˠ ˈoːɟə]; meaning "Youth"), or the Irish Youth Hostel Association (IYHA), is a non-profit organisation providing youth hostel accommodation across Ireland. An Óige is a member of Hostelling International.
Street address: 61 Mountjoy Street, Dublin 7, Ireland (from Wikidata)
website: http://anoige.ie
The Archdiocese of Dublin (Irish: Ard-Deoise Bhaile Átha Cliath) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or archdiocese of the Catholic Church located in the eastern part of Ireland. Its archepiscopal see includes the republic's capital city – Dublin. The cathedral church of the archdiocese is St Mary's Cathedral. Dublin was formally recognised as a metropolitan province in 1152 by the Synod of Kells. Its second archbishop, Lorcán Ua Tuathail (Anglicised as St Laurence O'Toole), is also its patron saint.
website: http://www.dublindiocese.ie/
EirGrid plc is the state-owned electric power transmission operator in Ireland. It is a public limited company registered under the Companies Acts; its shares are held by the Minister for Climate, Energy and the Environment. It is one of a number of Irish state-sponsored bodies and is regulated by the Commission for Regulation of Utilities.
website: https://www.eirgridgroup.com/
St Oliver Plunkett/Eoghan Ruadh (Irish: Naomh Oilibhéar Pluincéad, Eoghan Ruadh ) is a Gaelic Athletic Association club situated on the Navan Road on the northside of Dublin, Ireland. St Oliver Plunkett Eoghan Ruadh senior football team currently have no sponsor. Plunketts won the 2006 Dublin AFL Division 2 title and won the 2007 Dublin AFL Division 1 title. Plunketts currently compete in the Dublin Senior Hurling League Division 2 and Dublin Senior B, Division 2 Camogie League.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is a global research community-driven organization started in 2013 by the European Commission, the US National Science Foundation and National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the Australian Department of Innovation. Its mission is to build the social and technical bridges to enable open sharing and re-use of data. The RDA vision is researchers and innovators openly sharing and resuing data across technologies, disciplines, and countries to address the grand challenges of society. In its initial years, the RDA was major recipient of support in the form of grants from its constituent members' governments. Since 2017, the RDA is sustained by its Organisational and Regional members.
website: https://rd-alliance.org
Templeogue Synge Street (Irish: Teach Mealóg Sráid Singe) is a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in Dublin, Ireland. Synge Street Past Pupils G.F.C was founded in 1945 and Templeogue G.F.C formed in 1978. The two clubs were merged in 1999. They won the Dublin Intermediate Football Championship in 2008 giving them a coveted spot in the Dublin Senior Football Championship for 2009. As of 2008, the club was playing in AFL 1, AFL 5 and AFL 9.
CoderDojo is a global volunteer-led community of free programming workshops for young people. The movement began in 2011 as a grassroots organisation with each individual clubs acting independently, with one founding principle: One Rule, Be Cool. Supporters of CoderDojo believe it is part of the solution to address the global shortage of programmers by getting young people more involved with ICT learning. The movement has seen significant growth since its founding. The CoderDojo Foundation estimates 1,250 Dojos spread across 69 countries, with a growth rate of several new Dojos every week.
website: http://coderdojo.com/, https://coderdojo.com
The Crime and Security Branch (CSB) (Irish: Brainse Coireachta agus Slándála) – previously known as C3 – is responsible for the administration of national security, counter terrorism and serious crime investigations within the Garda Síochána, the national police force of Ireland. The section oversees intelligence relating to subversive, paramilitary and terrorism matters, conducts counter-intelligence, liaises with foreign law enforcement agencies, handles confidential informants, administers VIP and witness protection, monitors potential corrupt Garda officers and provides information on threats to the state to the Garda Commissioner and Government of Ireland.
website: http://www.garda.ie/Controller.aspx?Page=40&Lang=1
The Special Detective Unit (SDU) (Irish: Aonad Speisialta Bleachtaireachta) is the main domestic security agency of the Garda Síochána, the national police force of Ireland, under the aegis of the Crime & Security Branch (CSB). It is the primary counter-terrorism and counter-espionage investigative unit within the state. The Special Detective Unit superseded the Special Branch (which they are still commonly referred to as), which itself replaced the older Criminal Investigation Department (CID), which was founded in 1921. They work in conjunction with the Irish Military Intelligence Service (IMIS) – Ireland's national intelligence service – on internal matters. The unit's headquarters are on Military Road, Kilmainham, Dublin 8.
website: http://www.garda.ie/Controller.aspx?Page=40&Lang=1
St. James Gaels, or Gaeil Naomh Shéamais in Irish, are a Gaelic Athletic Association club located in Dublin, Ireland.
website: https://www.matheson.com/
The Law Society of Ireland (Irish: Dlí-Chumann na hÉireann) is a professional body established on 24 June 1830 and is the educational, representative and regulatory body of the solicitors' profession in Ireland. As of 2022, the Law Society had 12,392 solicitor members and an annual turnover of over €32m. It is headquartered in Dublin, Ireland's capital city.
Crumlin GAA Club is a Gaelic Athletic Association club in Crumlin, Dublin, Ireland.
website: http://www.crumlingaa.com/
Telekinesys Research Limited (TR), doing business as Havok Group, is an Irish software company founded on 9 July 1998 by Hugh Reynolds and Steven Collins, based in Dublin, Ireland, and owned by Microsoft's Ireland Research subsidiary. They have partnerships with Activision, Electronic Arts, Nintendo, Xbox Game Studios, Sony Interactive Entertainment, Bethesda Softworks and Ubisoft.
website: http://www.havok.com/
The Department of Education and Youth (Irish: An Roinn Oideachais agus Óige) is a department of the Government of Ireland. It is led by the Minister for Education and Youth.
website: https://www.gov.ie/en/organisation/department-of-education/
The Irish Deaf Society (IDS) is the national representative organisation of the Deaf community in Ireland. It upholds the status of Irish Sign Language (ISL), which is the first and preferred language of Deaf people in Ireland. The Society, a growing and vital organization, provides a number of specific health, personal and social services to deaf adults, children and their families.
website: http://www.deaf.ie
The Irish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (ISPCC) is a charity in Ireland dedicated to enhancing the lives of children and young people. It provides a range of services to children and families in Ireland, and promotes children's rights.
Kevin's is a hurling club based in Dolphin's Barn in Dublin's south inner city, Ireland.
Memjet is a printing technology and components company. It maintains its corporate office in San Diego, California, and has offices in Dublin, Sydney, Taipei, Singapore and Boise, Idaho. Memjet's president and chief executive officer, Len Lauer, was appointed in January 2010. Before joining Memjet, Lauer served as executive vice president and chief operating officer of Qualcomm.
website: http://www.memjet.com/
The Department of Culture, Communications and Sport (Irish: An Roinn Cultúir, Cumarsáide agus Spóirt) is a department of the Government of Ireland. It is led by the Minister for Culture, Communications and Sport.
website: https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-culture-communications-and-sport/
The Food Safety Authority of Ireland (FSAI) (Irish: Údarás Sábháilteachta Bia na hÉireann – USBE) is the statutory body responsible for ensuring food produced, distributed or marketed in Ireland complies with food safety and hygiene standards, best practice codes and legal requirements.
website: https://www.fsai.ie/
The Irish Film Classification Office (IFCO) (Irish: Oifig Aicmithe Scannán na hÉireann, OASÉ) is the organisation responsible for films, television programmes, and some video game classification and censorship within Ireland. Where restrictions are placed by the IFCO, they are legally binding.
website: https://www.ifco.ie
The Department of Justice, Home Affairs and Migration (Irish: An Roinn Dlí agus Cirt, Gnóthaí Baile agus Imirce) is a department of the Government of Ireland. It is led by the Minister for Justice, Home Affairs and Migration. The department's mission is to maintain and enhance community security and to promote a fairer society in Ireland.
website: https://www.gov.ie/en/organisation/department-of-justice/
The Irish Military Archives is the official depository for the records of the Irish Department of Defence, the Defence Forces, and the Army Pensions Board, as established by the National Archives Act of 1986.—The function of the archive is to collect, preserve, and make available material relating to the history of the development of the Defence Forces from the formation of the Irish Volunteers in November 1913 to the present day, including overseas service with the United Nations from 1958.
Réalt Dearg is one of Dublins six hurling only clubs (the others are Faughs, Kevins, Commercials, Civil Service Hurling Club and Setanta of Ballymun). The club is also the county's youngest, established in November 2009. The teams catchment area is the South Dublin City suburbs of Rathmines, Ranelagh, Rathgar, Terenure, Donnybrook and Clonskeagh. They currently train in Drimnagh Castle and Stepaside and play their games in Drimnagh Castle. Players can often be found in Vaughans and Bushy Park too.
website: http://realtdearg.weebly.com/
Street address: 8 Donore Avenue, Dublin (from Wikidata)
Street address: 8 Donore Avenue, Dublin (from Wikidata)
Street address: 8 Donore Avenue, Dublin (from Wikidata)
Street address: 8 Donore Avenue, Dublin (from Wikidata)
Street address: 8 Donore Avenue, Dublin (from Wikidata)
Street address: 8 Donore Avenue, Dublin (from Wikidata)
Is bruachbhaile i ndeisceart Bhaile Átha Cliath é Fatima (Béarla: Fatima).
Is teach tábhairne i mBaile Átha Cliath a bhí in Buck Whaley’s a bhíodh suite ar Shráid na Teamhrach (The Stone Leaf atá ann anois). Cearrbhach gan náire a toghadh go Teach na dTeachtaí in Éirinn a bhí in Thomas Whaley. ‘Buck Whaley’ nó ‘Jerusalem Whaley’ a thugtaí air leis. Sa bhliain 1788 rinne sé geall go bhféadfadh sé taisteal go hIarúsailéim agus ar ais taobh istigh de dhá bhliain. Shíl daoine go mbeadh sé ródhainséarach ar fad. Chaith sé £8,000 ar an turas ach thuill sé brabús de £7,000 nuair a d’fhill sé in am. Rinne an ceoltóir Rossa Ó Snodaigh ó Kíla an turas seo a leanúint ar an gclár Bóthar Buck do TG4.
Ba theach tábhairne i mBaile Átha Cliath é The Long Stone a bhí suite ar Shráid na Teamhrach. Tá cúlra Lochlannach ag ainm an tábhairne seo. Thart ar an mbliain 837 AD tháinig na Lochlannaigh i dtír timpeall ar an áit seo. Chuir siad cloch fhada ina seasamh le rá gur leo an áit (os comhair gheataí Choláiste na Tríonóide sa lá atá inniu ann). Bhí an chuid seo den chathair faoi abhainn na Life ag an am agus sheas an chloch ann go maorga go 1794. Líonadh an abhainn isteach anseo ina dhiaidh sin. Cuireadh dealbh nua-aimseartha den chloch san áit. Clíodhna Cussen a dhear.
Street address: 11 Townsend St, Baile Átha Cliath 2 (from Wikidata)
Das Kraftwerk Dublin Bay (englisch Dublin Bay power station, irisch stáisiún cumhachta Chuan Bhaile Átha Cliath) ist ein GuD-Kraftwerk im Hafen der Stadt Dublin, County Dublin, Irland. Es ist im Besitz von Synergen und wird auch von Synergen betrieben.
Street address: 8 Upper Leeson Street (from Wikidata)
website: https://palestinemission.ie/
website: https://www.lgma.ie/
website: https://www.nederlandwereldwijd.nl/landen/ierland/over-ons/ambassade-in-dublin
Street address: 69 Merrion Road (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.indianembassydublin.gov.in/
Street address: Merrion Row, Dublin (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.mfat.govt.nz/en/countries-and-regions/europe/ireland/new-zealand-embassy/
Street address: 45-47 Pembroke Raod Dublin 4 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.mofaic.gov.ae/missions/UAE-Missions-Abroad/UAE-Missions-Abroad-Details?countryId=6f74dbf6-4af7-49bd-b0b1-d7669e954d88
Street address: 26 Waterloo Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4 (from Wikidata)
website: https://dublin.mae.ro
Street address: 66 Baggot Street Lower, Dublin 2 (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.lesothoembassy.ie/
L'ambassade du Canada en Irlande est la représentation diplomatique du Canada en Irlande. Ses bureaux sont situés au 7-8 Wilton Terrace, dans la capitale irlandaise Dublin.
Street address: 7-8 Wilton Terrace (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.international.gc.ca/country-pays/ireland-irlande/index.aspx
Street address: 1 Elgin Road (from Wikidata)
website: http://ireland.diplomatie.belgium.be
website: https://www.bmeia.gv.at/oeb-dublin/
Street address: Malakoff Villa, 184 Rathgar Road (from Wikidata)
Street address: Block 8, Harcourt Centre, Charlotte Way (from Wikidata)
website: http://dublin.itamaraty.gov.br
Street address: 22 Burlington Road (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.mfa.bg/embassies/ireland
Street address: 44 Wellington Road (from Wikidata)
website: https://chile.gob.cl/irlanda/
Street address: 32B Westland Square, Pearse Street (from Wikidata)
website: http://misiones.minrex.gob.cu/en/ireland/embassy-cuba-ireland, http://misiones.minrex.gob.cu/es/irlanda/embajada-de-cuba-en-irlanda
Street address: 71 Lower Leeson Street (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.mfa.gov.cy/mfa/embassies/embassy_dublin.nsf
Street address: 12 Clyde Road (from Wikidata)
Street address: 12 Clyde Road (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.ethiopianembassy.ie/
Street address: Russell House, Stokes Place, St. Stephen's Green (from Wikidata)
website: https://finlandabroad.fi/web/irl/
Street address: 17 Morehampton Road (from Wikidata)
Street address: 2 Fitzwilliam Place (from Wikidata)
website: https://dublin.mfa.gov.hu
website: https://embassies.gov.il/dublin
Street address: 72 Merrion Square South, Dublin, Ireland (from Wikidata)
Street address: 15 Ailesbury Drive (from Wikidata)
Street address: Level 3A -5A, Shelbourne House, Shelbourne Road (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.kln.gov.my/web/irl_dublin
Street address: 2 Upper Mount Street (from Wikidata)
website: https://irlanda.mfa.gov.md/
Street address: 39 Raglan Road (from Wikidata)
Street address: 56 Leeson Park (from Wikidata)
website: https://nigerianembassydublin.org/
Street address: 46 Fitzwilliam Square West (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.gob.pe/embajada-del-peru-en-irlanda
Street address: 70 Upper Leeson Street (from Wikidata)
website: https://dublin.embaixadaportugal.mne.gov.pt
Street address: 80 Merrion Square South (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.mzv.sk/web/dublin
Street address: Apt 9, Raglan Hall, Clyde Road (from Wikidata)
Street address: Alexandra House, Earlsfort Centre, Earlsfort Terrace (from Wikidata)
Street address: 17A Merlyn Park, (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.exteriores.gob.es/Embajadas/DUBLIN
Street address: 52-54 Grafton Street, Dublin 2 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 8 Raglan Road (from Wikidata)
website: https://dublin-be.mfa.gov.tr
中华人民共和国驻爱尔兰大使馆(英語:Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Ireland),简称中国驻爱尔兰大使馆,是中华人民共和国驻爱尔兰的外交代表机构。
website: http://ie.chineseembassy.org
Das Éamonn Ceannt Cycling Stadium, auch Sundrive Velodrome genannt, ist eine offene Radrennbahn im irischen Dublin.
Street address: Hawkins Street, Dublin 2 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 20 D’Olier Street (from Wikidata)
website: http://ashfieldhostel.com/
Street address: 14 Hollybrook Park, Clontarf, Dublin 3 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 16 Hollybrook Park, Clontarf, Dublin 3 (from Wikidata)
Die St Stephen’s Green Church (auch: Dublin Unitarian Church) ist ein unitarisches Kirchengebäude in der irischen Hauptstadt Dublin. Die Kirche befindet sich gegenüber dem westlichen Ende des Parks St. Stephen’s Green im Zentrum Dublins.
Street address: Kildare Street, Dublin, Ireland (from Wikidata)
Street address: 13 Annesley Bridge Road, Dublin 3 (from Wikidata)
Street address: 71 Clontarf Road (from Wikidata)
Abbotstown (Irish: Baile an Aba) is a townland in the civil parish of Castleknock in Fingal, Ireland. It is also the name of an historical demesne and country estate that is close to Blanchardstown. Historically the estate belonged to a number of aristocratic families. When these neighbouring families intermarried, their combined estates in Abbotstown and the townland of Sheephill were usually, though informally, called "Abbotstown". Despite a significant level of suburban development in the wider Dublin 15 area from the 1980s onwards, Abbotstown and Sheephill remained largely undeveloped, as the demesne was held by several state bodies. Today, the majority of the combined demesne remains unspoilt and now accommodates the administration offices and sporting grounds of the various bodies associated with Ireland's National Sports Campus. Abbotstown proper, however, does not contain any part of the campus nor the eponymous Abbotstown House itself. Instead, almost the whole of the land is given over to Connolly Hospital and the "St Francis Hospice".
Die Holy Trinity Priory (irisch Prióireacht na Tríonóide Naofa) war das Priorat der Regularkanoniker an der Christ Church Cathedral zu Dublin (Irland).
website: http://www.jcfj.ie/
website: https://www.maths.tcd.ie/
website: https://www.dcu.ie/library/index.shtml
Street address: Plz. Lincoln, Lincoln House (from Wikidata)
website: http://dublin.cervantes.es/es/biblioteca_espanol/Informacion_general_biblioteca_espanol.htm
website: https://www.tcd.ie/literary-translation/
website: https://merrionfertility.ie
Замок Конн (англ. Conn Castle; ирл. Dún an Conn; Dún an Griffin) — один из замков Ирландии, сейчас это археологический памятник, замок не сохранился. Когда-то стоял на вершине горы Хаут Хед (англ. Howth Head). Древнее ирландское название этой горы Бен Идэйр (англ. Bean Eadair) — гора Идэйра (легендарного воина). Гора стоит на берегу Ирландского моря, недалеко от Дублина. На горе ныне маяк, сохранились доисторические памятники, в частности, мегалитическое сооружение — портальная гробница типа дольмена, одна из крупнейших портальных гробниц в Ирландии, каждый камень её весит более 90 тонн. Сооружение датируют периодом неолита — считается, что она была построена более 5000 лет назад. Неясно, как в то время могли это построить. Согласно легендам, это могила Айдын или Этайн Фолтфинн — прекрасной королевы, вышла замуж за короля Оскара, а когда он погиб в битве, умерла от горя.
Drumcondra Castle (irisch Caisleán Dhroim Conrach) ist ein Schloss im nördlichen Stadtteil Drumcondra der irischen Hauptstadt Dublin. Heute ist in dem Haus in elisabethanischem Stil eine Blindenanstalt untergebracht.
Замок Рахмайнс (англ. Rathmines Castle) — один из замков Ирландии, графство Дублин на земле Рахмайнс. Замок был снесен в XX веке во время перестройки Дублина.
Street address: 41-47 Fenian St, Dublin (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.thealexhotel.ie/
Street address: Dean St (from Wikidata)
website: http://www.theshelbourne.ie
Die Royal Canal Scherzer Bridge ist eine schmiedeeiserne Brücke in Dublin, Irland. Die Scherzer Rollklappenbrücke ist unter der Nummer 912 in die Denkmal-Liste eingetragen. Sie befindet sich am North Wall Quay in der Guild Street. Die Brücke wurde 1912 errichtet und überbrückt den Royal Canal an der Stelle, an der er auf den Liffey trifft.
Isolde’s Tower war ein Wehr- und Beobachtungsturm an der Nordostseite der Stadt Dublin aus dem 13. Jahrhundert. Er war Bestandteil der normannischen Stadtbefestigung und sollte Angreifer aus dem Osten abwehren, welche die Liffey heraufkamen.
Das ehemalige Bürogebäude der British & Irish Steampacket Company (abgekürzt: B&I) steht am Sir John Rogerson’s Quay (Nr. 20–24) in Dublin, Irland. Es ist denkmalgeschützt und trägt die Denkmalnummer 7547 im Record of Protected Structures des Dublin City Council. Das Gebäude ist eines der wenigen übrig gebliebenen älteren Gebäude am Sir John Rogerson’s Quay, da die meisten ehemaligen Betriebsstätten zum Zwecke einer Sanierung abgerissen wurden.
Das CIÉ Goods Depot (Denkmalnummer 5836) ist ein ehemaliger Bahnhof und wurde um 1900 erbaut. Er steht am North Wall Quay (Nr. 48–57) in den Dublin Docklands. Ursprünglich als Bahnhof genutzt, ist das Gebäude heute in gewerblicher Mischnutzung. Es handelt sich um ein zweistöckiges freistehendes Backsteingebäude mit drei Trakten. Der Bahnhof wurde 1861 von der LNWR (London and Northwestern Railway Company) errichtet, um den Postverkehr zwischen London und Dublin zu verbessern. Der Passagiertransport spielte eine eher untergeordnete Rolle. Im Ersten Weltkrieg mussten irische Truppen, die an der Seite der britischen Armee kämpften, diesen Bahnhof passieren, um an Bord der Truppenschiffe zu gelangen. Nach dem Krieg wurde das Gebäude zunächst für den Güterverkehr verwendet und später als Verwaltungsgebäude der Eisenbahngesellschaft CIÉ. Das Gebäude bewahrt alle originalen inneren und äußeren Strukturen. Es ist Teil einer Gruppe historischer Gebäude, die nun die letzte verbleibende Gruppe von Gebäuden des 19. Jahrhunderts östlich des George’s Dock bilden. Die London and Northwestern Railway Company (LNWR) hatte ihren eigenen Architekten sowie angestellte Bauzeichner, daher ist der Bahnhof vermutlich ein hausinterner Entwurf. Der Chefingenieur (zunächst bautechnischer Assistent) war zwischen 1852 und 1886 J. B. Stansby. Stansby gestaltete auch die Zentrale des LNWR in London.
HIS Majesty’s Excise Store 1821 ist ein denkmalgeschütztes Lagerhaus (RPS 5070) an der Mayor Street Lower in Dublin, das um das Jahr 1821 erbaut wurde, im gleichen Zeitraum wie Stack A und Stack B am Custom House Quay.
Das British Rail Hotel ist ein denkmalgeschütztes Gebäude (Denkmalnummer 5838 & 5839) am North Wall Quay (Nr. 58–95) in Dublin, Irland. Das Gebäude wurde von 1870 bis 1900 von der London and North Western Railway Company (LNWR) gebaut, um ein anderes Hotel, genannt das „Prince of Wales“, zu ersetzen. Zu diesem Zweck kaufte die LNWR das Gebäude und eröffnete den Neubau im Jahr 1890. Zwei der hinteren Flügel des ehemaligen Hotels wurden dabei in das neue Gebäude integriert. Das Hotel trug damals noch den Namen „London & Northwestern Hotel“. Während des Irischen Unabhängigkeitskrieges war das Hotel von britischen Offizieren besetzt und wurde damals unter dem Namen „British Rail Hotel“ bekannt. Mit dem Rückgang des Fährbetriebes am North Wall Quay wurde das Gebäude von CIÉ übernommen. Zuletzt wurde es von Irish Rail als Bürogebäude genutzt und steht heute leer.
Das Ferryman Hotel ist ein denkmalgeschütztes Gebäude am Sir John Rogerson’s Quay in Dublin, Irland. Es ist eines der wenigen verbleibenden älteren Gebäude des Kais, da die meisten Betriebsstätten im Zuge einer Neugestaltung des Viertels abgerissen wurden. Das Hotel wurde in den 1780er Jahren im Auftrag von Lord Cardiff erbaut und besteht aus zwei gelisteten georgianischen Gebäuden mit den Denkmalnummern 7549 und 7550. Früher kreuzte die Fähre an diesem Punkt und brachte Arbeiter von den nördlichen zu den südlichen Kais, zum Dubliner Gasometer und zur Schiffswerft.
Die ehemalige Lagerhalle der Tropical Fruit Company befindet sich am Sir John Rogerson's Quay (30-32) in Dublin, Irland. Das Gebäude wurde in den 1890er Jahren erbaut und ist denkmalgeschützt. Die Denkmalnummer aus dem Record of Protected Structures des Dublin City Council's ist die Nummer 7548. Die zwei auffälligen Dachgiebel der Lagerhalle sind den Kais zugewandt. Zwei Schlusssteine des Gebäudes stammen von der ehemaligen Carlisle-Brücke, da diese für die 1880 sanierte heutige O'Connell-Brücke zu groß waren. Die geretteten Schlusssteine der Brücke sind in der Lagerhalle verbaut worden und repräsentieren den Atlantik und Anna Livia.
The Harbourmaster (Denkmalnummer: 2095). erbaut um 1830, befindet sich in den Custom House Docks in den Dublin Docklands. Seine ursprüngliche Nutzung als Haus des Hafenmeisters und somit Sitz der Hafenverwaltung wurde aufgegeben. Heute befindet sich dort ein Pub und ein Restaurant.
The Factory/Boland Mills Lagerhaus (Denkmalnummer: 485), erbaut in den 1870er Jahren, ist ein zweistöckiges ehemaliges Lagerhaus in den Dublin Docklands. Das Lagerhaus mit doppeltem Giebeldach gehört zum Gebäudekomplex der Boland-Getreidemühle und steht südlich der eigentlichen Mühle in der Barrow Street am Ufer des Grand Canal Docks.
Die dreifach gegiebelten einstöckigen Lagerhäuser am Hanover Quay 10–12 (Denkmalliste RPS 3512) in Dublin sind von circa 1870 bis 1900 für industrielle Zwecke erbaut worden. Sie bestehen aus Granit und Backstein.
The Glass Bottle Company (heute Irish Heart Foundation, früher ARUP Consulting Engineers) ist ein denkmalgeschütztes Gebäude in der Ringsend Road 50 in Dublin, Irland. Das im Stil des Art déco erbaute Gebäude (RPS 7379) wird heute von der Irisch Heart Foundation nutzt. Der Eingangsbereich, der in roten Backstein eingefasst ist, ist abstrakt geformt wie eine Glasflasche.
Das Coroner’s Court House (Denkmalnummer: 7853) ist ein denkmalgeschütztes Gebäude in Dublin. Es wurde 1901 erbaut und befindet sich gegenüber dem Busáras-Busbahnhof in der Store Street. Es wurde seit seiner Fertigstellung als Gericht für die Untersuchung von Todesursachen und bis 1999 auch als städtisches Leichenschauhaus genutzt.
Is foirgneamh é Halla na Máisiún (Freemasons' Hall nó Grand Lodge of Ireland) atá lonnaithe ar Shráid Theach Laighean i mBaile Átha Cliath.
website: https://freemason.ie
Street address: 21 Fitzwilliam Square South, Dublin 2, D02 RD28; Canal House, Station Road, Portarlington, R32 AP23 (from Wikidata)
website: https://www.dataprotection.ie/
Is bunscoil suite i gContae Bhaile Átha Cliath í Scoil Naoimh Joseph. Tá timpeall is 500 mac léann sa scoil.
The River Dodder (Irish: An Dothra) is one of the three main rivers in Dublin, Ireland, the others being the Liffey, of which the Dodder is the largest tributary, and the Tolka.
Donnybrook (Irish: Domhnach Broc, meaning 'church of Saint Broc') is a district of Dublin, Ireland, on the southside of the city, in the Dublin 4 postal district. It is home to the Irish public service broadcaster RTÉ and was once part of the Pembroke Township. Its neighbouring suburbs are Ballsbridge, Sandymount, Ranelagh and Clonskeagh.
Terenure College is a Carmelite-run secondary school located in the suburb of Terenure, Dublin, Ireland. The school was founded in 1860 and had an associated primary school until 2017. It is one of the "big six" Leinster Schools Rugby-playing institutions, winning the Leinster Schools Senior Cup 10 times. 80% of the students who sat the Leaving Certificate in 2007 accepted a place in an Irish university.
website: http://www.terenurecollege.ie
The High School, Dublin is a 12–18 mixed, Church of Ireland, independent secondary school in Rathgar, Dublin, Ireland.
website: http://www.highschooldublin.com
The Dublin Hebrew Congregation is an Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 32a Rathfarnham Road, in Terenure, Dublin, in Ireland.