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The facility has its origins in a private house in Donegall Street where a lying-in hospital was established in 1794. [1] It moved to larger premises in Townsend Street in November 1904. [1] The current facility was built on a site previously occupied by the Belfast Asylum, to the immediate south of the Royal Victoria Hospital. [2]
Presbyterian Church, Townsend St., Belfast Church Belfast B+ HB26/50/169: Upload Photo. Sinclair House, 89-101 Royal Avenue and 92-102 North St. Belfast Shop Belfast B+ HB26/50/186: Bank of Ireland, Royal Avenue, Belfast Bank Belfast B+ HB26/50/187: Belfast Castle, Antrim Road, Belfast Country House
1872 William Johnston (Townsend Street, Belfast) 1873 William Johnston (Townsend Street, Belfast) 1874 William Magill (Trinity, Cork) 1875 Josias Leslie Porter (Belfast) 1876 John Meneely (First Ballymacarrett, Belfast) 1877 George Bellis (Belfast) 1878 Thomas Witherow (Magee College, Londonderry) 1879 Robert Watts (Belfast) 1880 Jackson Smyth ...
The former Townsend Street Presbyterian Church. Now the home of the Ulster Orchestra. The Shankill Road begins at Peter's Hill, a road that flows from North Street in Belfast city centre and quickly merges into the Shankill itself at the Westlink. Peter's Hill is adjacent to Carrick Hill, a small nationalist area to the north of the city centre.
Eipic (Irish:; "epic"), styled as EIPIC, was a restaurant in Belfast, Northern Ireland. It was awarded a Michelin star in 2016 and retained that until its closure in 2023. [1] [2] [3] Head chef of EIPIC is Alex Greene. He took over from Danni Barry in late September 2017. [4]
The Arc at night in 2010. The Arc is a residential development located beside Abercorn Basin in the Titanic Quarter of Belfast, Northern Ireland.It contains 474 residential properties, a hotel, and a number of retail units, split across three buildings.
On 23 November 2014, the orchestra held a flash mob in St George's market to raise awareness of their funding problem and to ask for support. In late November, Belfast City Council offered £100,000 as a conditional pledge to the orchestra, if additional funding can be raised from other sources and the orchestra offers a plan for addressing a ...
MacAdam was born to Jane Shipboy (1774–1827) and her husband James MacAdam (1755–1821), who lived next to their hardware shop in High Street, Belfast. [2] Before being apprenticed to his father, he was educated at the new Belfast Academical Institution, a school founded on progressive principles by the former United Irishman William Drennan, and other veterans of the radical politics of ...