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Architecture of Carlow

09 March 2013
1731 – Borris House, Borris, Co. Carlow

1731 – Borris House, Borris, Co. Carlow

Architect: Richard Morrison & William Vitruvius Morrison The ancestral home of the Mcmorrough Kavanaghs, High Kings of Leinster, and originally an important castle guarding the River Barrow, Borris House was rebuilt in 1731....

19 March 2012
1794 – Obilisque Pedestils and Orrens

1794 – Obilisque Pedestils and Orrens

Architect: Michael Nowlan Inscription reads: “A Plan of an Obilisque Pedestils and Orrens to be done for Samuel Faulkner Esq. To be erected over the gateway at the entrance to the Forth. December...

22 November 2011
1800 – House Design, Co. Carlow

1800 – House Design, Co. Carlow

Architect: Plan of a House, front elevation, basement, ground & first floor, inscribed on outside, and dated Carlow 1800.

09 March 2013
1832 – Old School, Borris, Co. Carlow

1832 – Old School, Borris, Co. Carlow

Architect: Eccentric design with unusual tower, with Tudor Revival touches for a catholic school. The Old School closed in 1980 and has been used by different community groups since. The building is inscribed...

09 March 2013
1833 – Cathedral of the Assumption, Carlow, Co. Carlow

1833 – Cathedral of the Assumption, Carlow, Co. Carlow

Architect: Thomas A. Cobden The construction of Carlow Cathedral started in 1826 under the supervision of the architect Joseph Lynch who was succeeded by the architect Thomas Cobden in 1829 who changed the...

27 November 2012
1835 – Ballydarton House, Fenagh, Co. Carlow

1835 – Ballydarton House, Fenagh, Co. Carlow

Architect: Daniel Robertson This is a detached two-storey Tudor Revival country house with half-dormer attic, built c.1830, with three-stage battlemented tower to centre on a square plan, cut stone dressings including mullioned bay...

27 November 2012
1836 – Mount Leinster Lodge, Co. Carlow

1836 – Mount Leinster Lodge, Co. Carlow

Architect: Daniel Robertson Detached four-bay two-storey Tudor Revival house with half-dormer attic, c. 1840, on an asymmetrical plan with granite ashlar façade having carved stone dressings including mullioned bay and oriel windows and...

27 November 2012
1840s – Dunleckney Manor, Bagenalstown, Co. Carlow

1840s – Dunleckney Manor, Bagenalstown, Co. Carlow

Architect: Daniel Robertson Sir Nicholas Bagenal came to Ulster as Marshal of Elizabeth 1st’s army, settled in County Carlow and founded Bagenalstown. The family’s first house at Dunleckney was built in about 1610...

13 April 2009
1846 – Carlow Railway Station, Co. Carlow

1846 – Carlow Railway Station, Co. Carlow

Architect: Sir John MacNeill A good example of Jacobean Revival architecture, comprising a two storey central block and two single storey wings. Finished in yellow brick with granite features particularly in the window...

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