1966 – Nurses Home, Drogheda, Co. Louth
Architect: Richard Hurley

The Nurse's Home in Drogheda was built as part of the International Missionary Training Hospital which was itself finished in 1957. Built on a very restricted site, the building houses sleeping accommodation for eighty nurses in study bedrooms. The library and common
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1966 – Nurses Home, Drogheda, Co. Louth | Architecture @ Archiseek.com

Architect: Richard Hurley The Nurse's Home in Drogheda was built as part of the International Missionary Training Hospital which was itself finished in 1957. Built on a very restricted site, the building houses sleeping accommodation for eighty nurses in study bedrooms. The library and common room are on the upper floor, with views over the

Architecture @ Archiseek.com | Irish architecture, lost & unbuilt buildings

1952 – Nurses Home, Orthopedic Hospital of Ireland, Clontarf, Co. Dublin
Architect: Buckley & O'Gorman

Alongside the former Blackheath House which is now the administrative offices for the Orthopedic Hospital of Ireland, this modernist Nurses Home provides accommodation for twenty-eight nurses and sister
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1952 – Nurses Home, Orthopedic Hospital of Ireland, Clontarf, Co. Dublin | Architecture @ Archiseek.com

Architect: Buckley & O'Gorman Alongside the former Blackheath House which is now the administrative offices for the Orthopedic Hospital of Ireland, this modernist Nurses Home provides accommodation for twenty-eight nurses and sisters. Each room has garden views of the former demesne grounds.

Architecture @ Archiseek.com | Irish architecture, lost & unbuilt buildings

1940 – Former Nurses’ Home, Grangegorman, Dublin
Architect: Vincent Kelly

Enormous nurses’ home built for St. Brendan's Hospital in 1937-40, and further enlarged in 1949. A U-plan seventeen-bay five-storey building with eight bays on the side elevations. St. Brendan's Hospital was
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1940 – Former Nurses’ Home, Grangegorman, Dublin | Architecture @ Archiseek.com

Architect: Vincent Kelly Enormous nurses’ home built for St. Brendan's Hospital in 1937-40, and further enlarged in 1949. A U-plan seventeen-bay five-storey building with eight bays on the side elevations. St. Brendan's Hospital was formerly the Richmond District Lunatic Asylum, the population of the site rose from c. 283 patients in the 1850s to c.

Architecture @ Archiseek.com | Irish architecture, lost & unbuilt buildings