House - 16th/17th century, Dublin South City, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
House
There is nothing left to see here, and that absence is itself the point.
At the western end of High Street, where Dublin's old city pressed up against the wide open trading space of Cornmarket, a building once stood that served as the Common Hall, a civic gathering place of the kind that would have sat at the centre of urban life in a medieval and early modern town. Today, the ground gives nothing away.
The location was recorded on a map produced by the Friends of Medieval Dublin in 1978, which placed the hall on the north side of the junction, looking out over Cornmarket from a position that would have given it considerable civic presence. The reference coordinates from that map, listed as L2, fix it precisely within a wider survey effort to document Dublin's layered urban past before further development could erase it entirely. Bradley and King, writing in 1987, confirmed what any visitor standing there today would quickly notice: there are no visible surface remains. The building, whatever form it took in the sixteenth or seventeenth century, has left no trace above ground.
The area around High Street and Cornmarket is walkable and central, forming part of the older fabric of the city near Christchurch Cathedral. There is nothing to locate on arrival, no marker, no interpretive panel, no surviving wall. What the site offers instead is a prompt to think about how much of Dublin's civic infrastructure has simply vanished into later building, road widening, and the general churn of a city that never stopped rebuilding itself. If you are already in the area, the Friends of Medieval Dublin map, now a historical document in its own right, remains the clearest guide to what once occupied this corner of the city.