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Within a couple of years of the abolition of the [[Parliament of Ireland]], the viscount sold this Dublin residence since he received his seat now at the House of Lords in London. |
Within a couple of years of the abolition of the [[Parliament of Ireland]], the viscount sold this Dublin residence since he received his seat now at the House of Lords in London. |
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The government then bought the property for £15,000<ref>{{cite book |last=Wright |first=George Newenham |title=An historical guide to the city of Dublin |publisher=Four Courts Press |date=1825 |location=Dublin |pages=167–8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FgGFAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA167 }}</ref> and the court at the rear of the building was created with the addition of three brown-brick office buildings from 1807 to 1811 to the design of [[Francis Johnston (architect)|Francis Johnston]].<ref name=”:0″>{{Cite book|last=Casey|first=Christine|title=Dublin : the city within the Grand and Royal Canals and the Circular Road with the Phoenix Park|date=2005|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=0-300-10923-7|location=New Haven, Conn.|pages=509–510|oclc=61702208}}</ref> Between 1811 and 1835 the Stamp Office, where impressed [[stamp duty]] newspaper stamps, a form of [[Revenue stamps of Ireland|revenue stamp]] were applied to newspapers, journals and periodicals, was located in Powerscourt House having moved from [[Eustace Street]] with an original office having been designated for [[Foster Place]].<ref>{{cite book |last=O’Neill |first=Charles Patrick |title=Newspaper Stamps of Ireland |publisher=Watergate Press |date=1978 |location=Enniskillen |pages=9 }}</ref> |
The government then bought the property for £15,000<ref>{{cite book |last=Wright |first=George Newenham |title=An historical guide to the city of Dublin |publisher=Four Courts Press |date=1825 |location=Dublin |pages=167–8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FgGFAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA167 }}</ref> and the court at the rear of the building was created with the addition of three brown-brick office buildings from 1807 to 1811 to the design of [[Francis Johnston (architect)|Francis Johnston]].<ref name=”:0″>{{Cite book|last=Casey|first=Christine|title=Dublin : the city within the Grand and Royal Canals and the Circular Road with the Phoenix Park|date=2005|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=0-300-10923-7|location=New Haven, Conn.|pages=509–510|oclc=61702208}}</ref> Between 1811 and 1835 the Stamp Office, where impressed [[stamp duty]] newspaper stamps, a form of [[Revenue stamps of Ireland|revenue stamp]] were applied to newspapers, journals and periodicals, was located in Powerscourt House having moved from [[Eustace Street]] with an original office having been designated for [[Foster Place]].<ref>{{cite book |last=O’Neill |first=Charles Patrick |title=Newspaper Stamps of Ireland |publisher=Watergate Press |date=1978 |location=Enniskillen |pages=9 }}</ref> |
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=== Shopping centre === |
=== Shopping centre === |
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Revision as of 11:40, 15 December 2025
Palladian townhouse in Dublin 2, Ireland
Powerscourt House is the former Dublin townhouse of Viscount Powerscourt and now the Powerscourt Townhouse Centre, located on South William Street, Dublin.
History
The townhouse was constructed between 1771-74 for Richard Wingfield, 3rd Viscount Powerscourt overlooking a garden in front with granite stone from his own Powerscourt Estate in County Wicklow.[2] Wingfield was a member of the Irish House of Lords and the house enabled him and his family to stay there when they were visiting from their rural estate of the same name in Enniskerry.[3]
The house was designed by the architect and stonemason Robert Mack and has been characterised as “last-gasp Palladianism on a grand scale on a narrow street”, more reminiscent of a county house than a city townhouse.
Various notable craftsmen were noted as having worked on the building including Ignatius McDonagh’s woodcarving on the interior staircase balustrade and furniture.[4]
James McCullagh completed stuccowork throughout the house including on the stairhall and study while Michael Stapleton completed stuccowork on the principal reception rooms. In both cases, this is some of the first stuccowork in the city in the more delicate neo classical style of Robert and James Adam and marked the transition in taste away from the more elaborate Rococo style which had dominated many of the city townhouses of the prior period.
Stamp Office
Within a couple of years of the abolition of the Parliament of Ireland, the viscount sold this Dublin residence since he received his seat now at the House of Lords in London.
The government then bought the property for £15,000[5] and the court at the rear of the building was created with the addition of three brown-brick office buildings from 1807 to 1811 to the design of Francis Johnston.[6] Between May 1811 and 1835 the Stamp Office, where impressed stamp duty newspaper stamps, a form of revenue stamp were applied to newspapers, journals and periodicals, was located in Powerscourt House having moved from Eustace Street with an original office having been designated for Foster Place.[7]
Shopping centre
Powerscourt House was purchased and redeveloped as a shopping centre between 1978 and 1981[6] by Robin Power. The journalist Frank McDonald described the conversion of the building as “imaginative” and “the city’s smartest shopping centre”.[8][2]
