Survey Data

Reg No

50060353


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Artistic, Historical, Social, Technical


Previous Name

Victoria and Albert Bridge


Original Use

Bridge


In Use As

Bridge


Date

1855 - 1865


Coordinates

314328, 234292


Date Recorded

01/09/2014


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Single-span cast-iron road bridge spanning River Liffey, erected 1858-61. Cast-iron structure comprising seven I-section beams with cross-bracing between, pierced spandrels and parapets. Cast lettering incorporated on west elevation:'Robert Daglish Junr St Helens Foundry Lancashire 1858'. Wrought-iron decking. Ashlar granite abutments with cornice and panelled piers having shallow in-stepped pyramidal caps. Eastern end includes bronze Catholic Emancipation centenary commemorative plaque: 'Saoirse Chreidimh 1829-1929', set in cast concrete pier.

Appraisal

A fine mid-nineteenth-century single-span cast-iron bridge, erected to designs by George Halpin to provide an improved vehicular link over the Liffey between Victoria Quay and Usher’s Quay in the south to Wolfe Tone Quay and Sarsfield Quay in the north. Technically, it displays the innovative qualities of cast iron as a material capable of connecting both sides of the river in a single span. Along with a number of other bridges over the Liffey, it remains a prominent and functional city landmark, contributing to the architectural and transport heritage of Dublin, and representative of the growth and expansion of the Victorian city.