Misplaced Pages

Liberties College

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
#670329

4-744: Liberties College is an educational institution in Bull Alley Street , Dublin , Republic of Ireland . It offers further education courses, including Post Leaving Certificate courses. The college is housed in an Edwardian building, described in the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage record as displaying elements of the "free Queen Anne idiom" and the "Flemish Renaissance" style. The courses offered include Counselling, Health Care, Montessori Education, Social Studies, Tourism, and Information Technology. At Liberties College many students avail of Back to Education and Training Support, via

8-458: Is a street in the medieval area of Dublin , Ireland. Bull Alley Street runs from Bride Street to the east to Patrick Street to the west, and parallel with Bride Road . Along the southern side of the street is St Patrick's Park. This street first appears on maps of Dublin in 1680 as Bull Alley. It was part of the parish of St Nicholas Within. It is probable that the Street's name is derived from

12-618: The BEA and VTOS schemes. Liberties College is under supervision of the CDETB/City of Dublin Education and Training Board umbrella body. 53°20′27″N 6°16′16″W  /  53.3408°N 6.2712°W  / 53.3408; -6.2712 This Irish university, college or other education institution article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Bull Alley Street Bull Alley Street ( Irish : Sráid Scabhat na dTarbh )

16-635: The name of a tavern or inn with a sign of a bull. In the late 1800s, the street had a large number of butchers, victuallers and other jobs associated with the meat industry . In the 1900s, the Dublin Corporation built a housing scheme on Bull Alley Street, designed by C. J. McCarthy . It was completed in 1904, and complemented the Iveagh Trust scheme adjacent. The Iveagh Trust scheme consists of eight blocks of 213 apartments built between 1901 and 1905. Both schemes replaced slums which were razed for

#670329