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The Sackville Street and Gardiner’s Mall illustration is attributed to Joseph Tudor, circa 1753, and engraved by John Jones (fl. 1740–1770). It appears to be from an original architectural drawing by Oliver Grace, from between 1751–1755.

The Sackville Street and Gardiner’s Mall illustration is attributed to Joseph Tudor, circa 1753, and engraved by John Jones (fl. 1740–1770). It appears to be from an original architectural drawing by Oliver Grace, from between 1751–1755.

Research metadata

Quick facts

Address / Eircode 42 O'Connell Street Upper, Dublin 1, D01 PF57
Building type Terraced three-bay four-storey former townhouse over exposed basement (later club / commercial premises)
Period / date Built c.1752 (1750–1755)
Heritage refs (RPS / NIAH) RPS 6022; NIAH Reg. No. 50010554 (Rating: National)
Apparent status Vacant (long-term)
On Derelict Sites Register? Unknown (not confirmed on DCC Derelict Sites Register)
On Vacant Sites Register? Unknown
Owner Hammerson (owner of Dundrum Town Centre, Swords Pavilions and the ILAC); purchased by the adjoining Royal Dublin Hotel in 1972; now within the eastern O'Connell Street regeneration lands

Summary

No. 42 Upper O'Connell Street is the last surviving intact mid-eighteenth-century townhouse on the street — the sole remnant of Luke Gardiner's 1750s Sackville Mall development — and is of national architectural importance. [1][2] A protected structure (RPS 6022) and NIAH-rated of national significance, it has been vacant since the 1980s and is structurally exposed following demolition of neighbouring buildings, but is now slated for restoration within a permitted regeneration scheme for the eastern side of the street. [3][4]

Identification

History & Significance