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Wide Streets Commission

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Sackville Street (as represented in this mid-18th century etching) was created by demolishing the buildings on the western side of Drogheda Street

The Wide Streets Commission (officially the Commissioners for making Wide and Convenient Ways, Streets and Passages)[1] was established by an Act of Parliament in 1758, at the request of Dublin Corporation, as a body to govern standards on the layout of streets, bridges, buildings and other architectural considerations in Dublin. The commission was abolished by the Dublin Improvement Act of 1849, with the final meeting of the Commission taking place on 2 January 1851.[2]

Other improvement commissioners in Dublin in the same era were the Pipe Water Committee for drinking water, the Paving Board for footpaths, public lighting and sewerage, and the Ballast Board for Dublin Port.[3]

History

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Parliament Street Act 1757
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act for making a wide and convenient way, street, and passage, from Essex-Bridge to the Castle of Dublin, and for other purposes therein mentioned.
Citation31 Geo. 2. c. 19 (I)
Dates
Royal assent29 April 1758
Repealed1 August 1849
Other legislation
Amended by33 Geo. 2. c. 15 (I), 7 Geo. 3. c. 7 (I)
Repealed byDublin Improvement Act 1849
Relates to12 & 13 Vict. c. 97

The Wide Streets Commission was established in 1758. Over the following decades, the commission reshaped the old medieval city of Dublin, and created a network of main thoroughfares by wholesale demolition or widening of old streets or the creation of entirely new ones.[4]

One of the first projects was to widen Essex Bridge (now Grattan Bridge), in 1755 to cope with the traffic congestion caused by human, horse-drawn, and bovine traffic crossing the River Liffey from Capel Street. The building of Parliament Street and the Royal Exchange (now Dublin City Hall), to create a vista from across the river Liffey on Capel Street, soon followed.[5]

Other major initiatives, under the then Chief Commissioner John Beresford, included the effort to merge and widen several narrow streets into one new street on Dublin's northside, creating Sackville Street (now called O'Connell Street). The main north–south axis of the city was thus moved from Capel Street and Parliament Street to the new thoroughfare further east.

The widening of Dame Street, between Cork Hill and College Green was the second great initiative of the commission. This work was initiated in 1777, but it was not until 1782 that the first new building was built at Palace Street. Christchurch and George's Street are also the result of the project of widening Georgian Dublin's congested streets. North Frederick Street was created from 1789 linking Sackville Street and Dorset Street.

Between 1785 and 1790 further phases of the Dame Street project was undertaken between George's Lane and Trinity Street. Drawings exist dated 1832 for the buildings between Fownes Street and Temple Lane.[citation needed]

Westmoreland Street (90 feet wide), and D'Olier Street (90 feet wide and designed by Henry Aaron Baker)[6] and part of Burgh Quay (1806) including the new Corn Exchange, formed part of the work of the commission.[7] Originally many of the new houses had 15 feet high granite shop fronts at street level which were divided into three bays, a narrow bay at each side, incorporating a door, and a wide bay at the middle of the facade for the display of goods. Many of these shopfronts still remain on the west side of d'Olier Street.[8]

Many of the Wide Street Commission buildings can be seen today on streets with granite shopfronts at ground floor level and brick facades above. They are generally streets with standardised house designs such as Burgh Quay.

Wellington Quay - with its arcaded shop fronts - and Merchants Arch are also part of the commission's work, as are Eden Quay, Lower Abbey Street, Bachelor's Walk, and Beresford Place.

Other improvement commissioners

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The Paving Board had been appointed by an Act of 1774, and were charged with the duty of "improving the streets by paving the roadway, altering the levels, and removing encroachments". They also had the power to re-order the numbering of houses.[9] The body operated from a house on the corner of Nassau Street and Dawson Street and later moved to Langford House on Mary Street from around 1819 when it was referred to as the Paving House.[10][11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Sheridan, Edel (2001). "Designing the Capital City". In Brady, Joseph; Simms, Anngret (eds.). Dublin Through Space & Time. Four Courts Press. p. 112. ISBN 978-1-85182-641-4.
  2. ^ de Courcy, J.W. (1996) The Liffey in Dublin, Dublin, Ireland: Gill & Macmillan, ISBN 0-7171-2423-1
  3. ^ "The Dublin Paving Board: bringing order to 18th-century Dublin's streets". Engineers Journal. 17 May 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  4. ^ Nevin, Seamus (2012). "History Repeating: Georgian Ireland's Property Bubble". History Ireland. 20 (1): 22–24. JSTOR 41331440.
  5. ^ Dublincastle.ie — History — Creation of Parliament Street for access
  6. ^ Archiseek - Baker, Henry Aaron (1753-1836)
  7. ^ Archiseek - Development of Dublin City
  8. ^ "Google Maps - 53.3464148,-6.2581079".
  9. ^ Simms 1977, p. 5.
  10. ^ "The Registered Papers of the Chief Secretary's Office: National Archives: 1831 (Browse records)". csorp.nationalarchives.ie. Retrieved 29 October 2024.
  11. ^ Wright, George Newenham (1825). "An Historical Guide to the City of Dublin: Illustrated by Engravings, and a Plan of the City". Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy. Retrieved 29 October 2024.

Sources

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