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Standing at the corner of Temple Lane South, the first pub on the site was reputedly licensed in the early 19th century. [2] The pub building at 48 Temple Bar is listed by Dublin City Council on its Record of Protected Structures, [3] and is recorded in the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage (NIAH) as being built c. 1840. [4]
The Temple Bar: Temple Bar, Dublin: Open Tom and Jackie Cleary The Widow Scallans Pearse Street: Closed Closed soon after the murder of Martin Doherty at the pub in 1994. Tommy O'Gara's Manor Street Open Toner's Pub: Baggot Street: Open The Quinn family Whelan's: Camden Street: Open Mercantile Group
The Temple Bar Pub on Temple Lane Vintage shops in Temple Bar.. The area is the location of a number of cultural institutions, including the Irish Photography Centre (incorporating the Dublin Institute of Photography, the National Photographic Archive and the Gallery of Photography), the Ark Children's Cultural Centre, the Irish Film Institute, incorporating the Irish Film Archive, the Button ...
The original bar in Bray, was sold in February 2019. [5] As of 2021, the company reportedly had between 280 and 300 employees, [6] [7] declining to 180 by early 2022. [1] As of late 2022, the company's website listed four bars: two in Dublin (in Temple Bar and Nassau Street), one in London and one in New York. [8]
Eamonn Doran's (formerly known as The Rock Garden) was a bar and music venue located in Dublin's Temple Bar. [1] The venue also had an adjacent pizza parlour which was part-owned by Huey Morgan of the Fun Lovin' Criminals. Rob Smith at Eamonn Doran's in 2005
Merchants' Hall (sometimes Merchants' Arch) is a former 19th century guildhall, now a protected structure, on Wellington Quay in Dublin, Ireland.It is located opposite the Ha'penny Bridge and backs on to Temple Bar.
The street formerly marked the southern edge of the River Liffey, and was known in Irish as Sráid na Toinne ("street of the waves"). Its name may refer to the "fleet" of ships that moored along it, or it may be imitative of Fleet Street, London; many streets on Dublin's southside are named for London streets, and Dublin's Fleet Street is east of Dublin's Temple Bar, just as London's Fleet ...
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