Pearse Street

[3] It was constructed to connect the city centre to the Grand Canal Dock, primarily for commercial traffic.

[2] The Dublin Oil Gas Company was established in 1824 with its main premises on Great Brunswick Street.

[1] The 1936 Pearse Street fire at number 164, then the Exide Batteries factory, killed three Dublin firefighters.

Here, on the northern side, there is a Garda station, faced with Leinster granite from Ballybrew[5] and designed by Andrew Robinson in the Scottish Baronial style and featuring "keystone cops" in the form of carved heads of policemen as corbels.

It was sold to the Assemblies of God in 1987 and was renovated in the early 21st century as part of a FÁS-backed youth training scheme.

[4] The DART crosses Pearse street beside St. Mark's, and east of that is the former Antient Concert Rooms[8][9][10] where W. B. Yeats’ play The Countess Cathleen was first performed on 8 May 1899[11] and James Joyce won an award for singing at the Feis Ceoil 16 May 1904.

43 is the former Erasmus Smith Commercial and Civil Service School,[13][14] a bank and pub bracket the junction with Lombard Street, with Trinity College and the railway station and Goldsmith Hall opposite each other on Westland Row.

The square was constructed in 1839 but was slow to develop; there is still an undeveloped plot at the south-east end by Pearse Street.

The Royal Irish Yacht Club had premises on Clarendon Buildings, Great Brunswick Street from the early 1830s prior to their move to Kingstown.

His father James established an ecclesiastical architecture and sculpture firm (fashioning stone and marble altars and gravestones) at the site.

[1] The original house still stands as a memorial, while the Trinity City Hotel occupies the back garden.

No. 27 Pearse Street, birthplace of Patrick and Willie Pearse