The Printing House Explained

The Printing House
Native Name Lang:ga
Building Type:Temple
Architectural Style:Palladian
Classical
Location Town:Dublin
Location Country:Ireland
Coordinates:53.3448°N -6.2559°W
Est Completion:1734
Material:Portland stone (facade and columns)
Calp limestone (side and rear walls)
Granite (chimneys and column bases)
Floor Count:3 (2 over raised basement)
Architect:Richard Castle
Edward Lovett Pearce
Other Designers:Moses Darley (stonecutter)
Thomas Gilbert (stone supplier)
Main Contractor:John Plummer
References:[1] [2]

The Printing House is a classical Palladian style temple building that was constructed within the campus of Trinity College Dublin around 1734 under the tenure of provost Richard Baldwin.

The building housed the Dublin University Press from its opening until 1976.[3]

History

The building was likely executed by Richard Castle as his first solo commission although it may have originally been designed by Castle or Edward Lovett Pearce prior to his death in 1733.

The builder is recorded as John Plummer, while other craftsmen included Moses Darley as stonecutter and Thomas Gilbert who was involved in procuring stone.[4] [5] Darley, Gilbert and Castle had all previously worked for Lovett Pearce on the nearby Parliament House, the first Palladian building of scale in Dublin.

The building is faced in rusticated imported Portland stone with freestanding pillars while more modest local calp limestone is used for the sides of the building with the chimneys and bases of the pillars in more sturdy Irish granite.

The building would have originally closed a pleached lime tree-lined avenue leading from the Thomas Burgh designed Anatomy House which was constructed circa 20 years prior but has since been demolished. It would have originally been to the rear of The Rubrics and Rotten Row.[6]

John Sterne, Bishop of Clogher donated £1,000 towards the construction of the building and a plaque with a Latin dedication is still inscribed over the front door.[7]

The building would have been notable for being one of the earliest Palladian style buildings in Dublin using a combination of Portland stone in the English Georgian tradition of the period as well as local materials from the Dublin region.

Other college works

Castle was also engaged to later design a campanile (belfry) for the campus which was constructed around 1746 but was ultimately demolished around 1790 as it was deemed structurally unsound.[8] He also designed a dining hall around 1745 which was replaced around 1765 and presented designs for an entirely new west front and front square for the college which have since been lost.[9]

Book of Kells

In 2023, it was announced that the building would host the Book of Kells, during refurbishment works which are to be carried out on the Old Library building within the campus.[10]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Architecture @ Archiseek.com - 1734 - Printing House, Trinity College Dublin . 14 May 2024 . 8 February 2010.
  2. Web site: Freitag . Barbara . The Troubled Life of Richard Castle, Ireland’s Pre-Eminent Early Eighteenth-Century Architect . Cambridge Scholars Publishing . 14 May 2024 . en . 29 August 2023.
  3. Web site: Printing House - Estates & Facilities - Trinity College Dublin . www.tcd.ie . 14 May 2024.
  4. Web site: Dictionary of Irish Architects . www.dia.ie . 14 May 2024.
  5. Web site: Casey . Christine . Hayes . Melanie . Enriching Architecture: Craft and its conservation in Anglo-Irish building production, 1660–1760 . UCL Press . 14 May 2024 . en . 26 January 2023.
  6. Web site: Printing House, Trinity College, Dublin 2, DUBLIN . Buildings of Ireland . 14 May 2024.
  7. Web site: Overlooked II . The Irish Aesthete . 14 May 2024 . 3 April 2019.
  8. Web site: 1746 – Belfry, Trinity College Dublin Architecture @ Archiseek.com . 14 May 2024 . 3 August 2022.
  9. Web site: Castle (Castles, Cassels, Cassells), Richard Dictionary of Irish Biography . www.dib.ie . 14 May 2024 . en.
  10. Web site: Trinity College Dublin turns a page on Old Library conservation . The Art Newspaper - International art news and events . 14 May 2024 . 1 February 2024.