D'Olier Street explained

D'Olier Street
Map Type:Ireland Central Dublin
Namesake:Jeremiah D'Olier
Length M:160
Location:Dublin, Ireland
Postal Code:D02
Coordinates:53.3465°N -6.2582°W
Direction A:northwest
Terminus A:O'Connell Bridge
Direction B:southeast
Terminus B:College Street, Townsend Street
Known For:The Irish Times, O'Connell Bridge House

D'Olier Street (; Irish: Sráid D'Olier)[1] [2] [3] 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.

History

The street is named after Jeremiah D'Olier (1745–1817), a Huguenot goldsmith and a founder of the Bank of Ireland.[4] [5] D'Olier was the Sheriff of Dublin City in 1788 and a member of the Wide Streets Commission. The street was one of the last major interventions in the Dublin city plan to be executed by the Wide Streets Commissioners.[6] [7]

Notable addresses

From 1895 to 2006, Irish Times was based in D'Olier Street, leading the paper to be nicknamed The Old Lady of D'Olier Street. The paper is now based in Tara Street.[8]

O'Connell Bridge House is located at 2 D'Olier Street.[9] This office development was extended in 1968, by the same developer as O'Connell Bridge House, John Byrne. Alongside D'Olier House these modern office blocks surround the former headquarters of the Dublin Gas Company, a rare surviving art deco building in Dublin, which was also designed by Desmond FitzGerald. D'Olier House has been leased by the Department of Social Welfare since shortly after its completion.

In 1830, Samuel Lover was secretary of the Royal Hibernian Academy and lived at number 9 D'Olier Street.

In 1891 James Franklin Fuller designed the D'Olier Chambers building of yellow brick and terracotta for the Gallaher Tobacco Company.[10]

Manchester United opened a team store on the street in 2000 having signed a 15-year lease at €520,000 per annum.[11] It closed in 2002.[12] The lease expired in August 2015.

A number of nightclubs have operated on the street, including Club XXI and Redz in the 2000s.[13] Tramline, at number 21, was the only club in operation on the street.[14]

The Dublin central clinic of the Irish Blood Transfusion Service is based on the 2nd Floor of LaFayette House on the street.[15] As of 2013, the IBTS were renting the second and third floors of the building at a fee of €105,000 per annum.[16] In 2014 the IBTS considered moving to a cheaper city centre location due to high running costs,[17] but remain on D'Olier Street as of May 2022.

The Lafayette Building, on the junction of Westmoreland Street and D’Olier Street, is a six-storey over basement block which has been described as a "landmark building which looks straight down O’Connell Street and dominates the city streetscape next to O'Connell Bridge".[16] Developed in the 1890s for the Liverpool and Lancashire Insurance Company and designed by architect John Joseph O'Callaghan, it was described as a “Portland stone baronial exercise with Gothic and Ruskinian leanings.”[16] It was redeveloped in the late 1990s when the three top floors of the building were converted into 14 apartments.

References

Citations

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 19 Irish Place Names That Tourists Will Absolutely Love. Lovin.ie.
  2. Web site: Pronunciations - James Joyce Online Notes. www.jjon.org. 13 February 2020. 4 August 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210804191435/http://www.jjon.org/joyce-s-words/pronunciations. dead.
  3. Web site: Sráid D'Olier/D'Olier Street . 2023-12-11 . logainm.ie . en.
  4. Book: Christine Casey. Dublin: The City Within the Grand and Royal Canals and the Circular Road with the Phoenix Park. Yale University Press. 2005. 978-0-300-10923-8. 417. 15 February 2009.
  5. Book: M'Cready, C. T. . Dublin street names dated and explained . 1987 . Carraig . 1-85068-005-1 . Blackrock, Co. Dublin . 31 . 263974843.
  6. Web site: D'Olier Street, Dublin - Buildings of Ireland - Irish Architecture. 15 February 2009. Archiseek. https://web.archive.org/web/20081121165253/http://www.irish-architecture.com/buildings_ireland/dublin/southcity/dolier_street/index.html. 21 November 2008. dead.
  7. Book: Clerkin, Paul . Dublin street names . 2001 . Gill & Macmillan . 0-7171-3204-8 . Dublin . 57–58 . 48467800.
  8. Web site: Old Lady of d'Olier St set to pack her bags .
  9. Book: Carey, Tim. Dublin since 1922. 3 November 2016. Hachette Books Ireland. 9781473620018. Google Books.
  10. Web site: 1891 – D'Olier Chambers, D'Olier Street, Dublin. February 17, 2010.
  11. Web site: Manchester United open shop in Dublin.
  12. Web site: Manchester United Lose Millions on Irish Property Deal.
  13. Web site: The ultimate list of closed Dublin nightclubs we'll never forget. 28 June 2017.
  14. Web site: Top 10 places you're GUARANTEED to get the shift in Dublin. 24 February 2020.
  15. Web site: D'Olier Street. . 2022-05-01.
  16. Web site: Fagan. Jack. 2013-06-19. €3.5m for landmark Lafayette Building. 2022-05-01. The Irish Times. en.
  17. Web site: IBTS clinic considers move to cut costs. . 2014-08-14 . 2022-05-01.