Reg No
50100595
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Social, Technical
Original Use
Lock
In Use As
Lock
Date
1785 - 1795
Coordinates
317121, 233175
Date Recorded
24/06/2016
Date Updated
--/--/--
Canal lock, built c. 1790 as part of Grand Canal at Huband Bridge. Cut limestone retaining walls, curved to south end, having copings tied with iron and lead pins. Two sets of double-leaf timber lock gates, having iron hinge fixings and cast-iron mechanisms. Located at south side of Huband Bridge, between Herbert Place and Percy Place, flanked by grassy banks with pair of painted masonry mooring posts, pedestrian path to west, canal bank tree-lined to Herbert Place, with cast-iron railings over painted granite plinth.
This lock is one of a series of forty-three on the Grand Canal, a waterway that connects Dublin with the River Shannon. Forming a curve from Portobello to Ringsend, and defining the south side of central Dublin, construction of the canal began in 1790 and was complete by 1797. The primary purpose was to increase trade by facilitating the transportation of goods, but the canal was also used to transport passengers. The high level of craftsmanship and quality of materials in the lock and associated bridge are indicative of the skill of those involved in the construction and of the wider impact and economic significance of the canal.