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Gardiner Street

Georgian architecture in IrelandStreets in Dublin (city)
Gardiner Street, Dublin
Gardiner Street, Dublin

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).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gardiner Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gardiner Street
Gardiner Street Middle, Dublin

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Wikipedia: Gardiner StreetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.355217 ° E -6.257586 °
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Address

Gardiner Street Middle 23
D01 PK61 Dublin (Mountjoy B ED, Mountjoy Square)
Ireland
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Gardiner Street, Dublin
Gardiner Street, Dublin
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Nearby Places

Langrishe Place, Methodist Chapel

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. 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.The original chapel opened on January 1, 1826 by Rev. Adam Averell, was under the auspices of the Primitive Wesleyan Society (who favoured the movement remaining within the established Church of Ireland), it was the third such chapel.It was sold in 1882. And used as a schoolhouse (Saint Mary's National School), today it is used by Talbot motors, the gothic styled gable wall still standing and a protected structure stands at the end of Langrishe Place. In 1882 the congregation moved to a United Methodist Church on (the Primitive Wesleyans ending the schism from the Wesleyan Church) Jones Road, Clonliffe, Drumcondra (facing what is now Croke Park), along with the congregation from Oriel Street. Jones road Methodist church closed in 1949 and was finally fully demolished following a legal challenge in 2011.The playwright Sean O'Casey worked as a janitor at No 10 Langrishe Place, which had been the methodist chapel, it had subsequently been a parish dispensary, a school and the branch of the Irish National Forresters Society. Langrishe Hall, was taken over in 1919 by James Larkin's sister Delia along with a number of others including Sean O'Casey, ran as the Irish Workers' Club and used for meetings and performances.

Mountjoy Square
Mountjoy Square

Mountjoy Square (Irish: Cearnóg Mhuinseo) is a Georgian 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.Over the centuries, the square has been home to many of Dublin's most prominent people: lawyers, churchmen, politicians, writers and visual artists. The writer James Joyce lived around the square during some of his formative years, playwright Seán O'Casey wrote and set some of his most famous plays on the square while living there, W.B. Yeats stayed there with his friend John O'Leary, and more recently, much of the Oscar-winning film Once was made in the square. Historic meetings have taken place there, including planning for the Easter Rising and some of the earliest Dáil meetings. Prominent Irish Unionists and Republicans have shared the square. Mountjoy can boast being Dublin's only true Georgian square, each of its sides being exactly 140 metres in length. While the North, East and West sides each have 18 houses, the South has 19, reflecting some variation in plot sizes. Though each side was originally numbered individually, the houses are now numbered continuously clockwise from no. 1 in the north-west corner. While its North and South sides are continuous from corner to corner, the East and West sides are in three terraces, interrupted by two side streets, Grenville Street and Gardiner Place to the West and Fitzgibbon and North Great Charles Street to the East. Gardiner Street passes through the West side of the square, while Belvidere Place and Gardiner Lane run off the North- and South-East corners. Although some of the original buildings fell to ruin over the 20th century and were eventually demolished, the new infill buildings were fronted with reproduction façades, so each side of the square maintains its appearance as a consistent Georgian terrace.