Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Jervis Shopping Centre is a major shopping centre in Dublin, Ireland. Opened in 1996, the centre is located in the area bordered by Jervis Street, Upper Abbey Street, Mary Street, and Liffey Street. The centre has a total of 70 retail units including clothing, food and electrical outlets.
Wolfe Tone Park (Irish: Páirc Wolfe Tone), [1] also known as Wolfe Tone Square, is a public space in Dublin, Ireland. It is bounded by Mary Street to the north, Jervis Street to the east, and Wolfe Tone Street to the west.
The Red Line runs east to west along Abbey Street through the city centre, and the Jervis stop is located to the east of Jervis Street, in front of the Jervis Shopping Centre. It also provides access to the Temple Bar and St. Mary's Abbey. [2] It has two edge platforms integrated into the pavement.
The street is part of the area developed by and named for Humphrey Jervis after 1674. Jervis purchased a portion of the St Mary's Abbey estate in 1674, [1] on which he developed Jervis Street with it first appearing on Charles Brooking's map of Dublin (1728). [2] He also developed Stafford Street, (now Wolfe Tone Street), Capel Street and Mary ...
The interchange includes a Luas tram stop (Red Cow), the main depot for the Red Line, a Park and Ride facility with 727 spaces, [3] and the control centre for the whole system. The Luas complex added extra traffic to the already-busy junction when it opened in 2004. [ 4 ]
The Paving Board was abolished in 1854 with the functions transferring to Dublin Corporation and the building was later occupied by Bewley and Draper. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] The house was finally demolished in 1931, and replaced with nurses school for Jervis Street hospital and later with commercial and retail buildings which now form part of the facade ...
Board-certified plastic surgeon Dr. Stafford Broumand, of 740 Park Plastic Surgery in New York, confirmed that his patients are looking for "more natural results versus overdone."
Humphrey Jervis is notable for having developed the area of Dublin to the north of the River Liffey.It was the first large-scale residential scheme of its kind, born out of his own initiative and funded privately by him, after he and number of associates bought 20 acres of the lands of St. Mary's Abbey in 1674 from Richard Power, 1st Earl of Tyrone, for the sum about £3,000.