ExploreMapSmallIMG
Visit the home of GUINNESS

monuments dublin 1

Dublin-1 Monuments
Choose from our selection of monuments in dublin 1 below - to view details on each, just click 'More'
5 monuments in dublin 1
Page 1 of 1
Photo:Unavailable
James Gandon
Dublin 1, Dublin
The three most spectacular buildings in Dublin - the Custom House, the Four Courts and King's Inn - are all the work of James Gandon, an English architect who was persuaded by Lord Beresford to come to Dublin to design his new Custom House in 1781.

The Custom House projest was fiercely opposed by rival interests and there were attacks on the site; Gandon was obliged to wear a sword to work. Even the opening of the buidings in 1791 was carried out in stealth. Gandons next great work, the...
Photo: The Spire, Dublin County
The Spire
Dublin 1, Dublin
The Spire in Dublin points skyward over the historic Irish capital like an enormous needle. It was built at a cost of four million euro and is the focal point of a project aimed at rejuvenating the O'Connell Street district, Dublin's traditional shopping and cultural hub.
Officially titled The Spire, though another consideration was The Brian Boru Spire, the monument has gained plenty of more colourful names by locals. Some of the cleaner examples include ‘The Spike’, ‘The Spire in the...
Photo:Unavailable
O'Connell Street
Dublin 1, Dublin
Dublin's widest and principal thoroughfare, O'Connell Street takes its name from the leader of the Catholic Emancipation movement, Daniel O'Connell. It has undergone several tranformations since it was first developed in the early eighteenth century by Henry Moore as Drogheda Street. Dublin owes much to Luke Gardiner and to Bartholomew Mosse, who between them planned the transformation of the street into a grand new avenue.
Badly damaged in the 1916 Rising and in the civil war of 1922...
Photo:Unavailable
Anna Livia
O Connell Street, Dublin 1, Dublin
The Anna Livia Fountain was built on O Connell Street in Dublin to commemorate the millennium of the city in 1988. Anna Livia is the spirit of the River Liffey.

It is commonly known to Dubliners as the "Floozy in the Jacuzzi".
The monument has now been removed from O'Connell Street and is expected to be moved to the Croppies Memorial on Dublins North Quay....
Photo:Unavailable
James Joyce
North Earl Street, Dublin 1, Dublin
More has been written about James Joyce than about Shakespeare.
The eldest son of a spendthrift who brought his large family from prosperity to poverty without relinquishing his standards, Joyce was educated by the Jesuits at Clongowes Wood College, one of the finest private schools in the country, until the money ran out.
He was then offered a free place at Belvedere College in the centre of Dublin to continue his secondary education. Precocious in many respects, he had his fi...
Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more...