Strathmore (Killiney)

Coordinates: 53°15′37″N 6°06′54″W / 53.2603°N 6.115°W / 53.2603; -6.115
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Strathmore is a mansion in Killiney, Dunleary-Rathdown in Ireland, and formerly the Official residence of the Canadian Ambassador to Ireland.[1]

The house dates from the 1860s and was designed by Dublin-born Irish architect Alfred Gresham Jones and was extensively remodelled in the late 1940s by British architect Oliver Hill.[2] It is located 10 miles (16 km) south of Dublin City Centre, 200 yards (180 m) from Killiney DART station. Strathmore is approximately 760 square metres (8,200 sq ft) in area.[citation needed]

Strathmore sits on a 3.654-hectare (9.03-acre) triangular piece of land surrounded mostly by Strathmore Road, but faces Killiney Hill Road. It features views of Killiney Bay, Sugar Loaf Mountain, and northern County Wicklow.[2] The grounds vary from formal gardens, walled gardens, extensive wooded areas to magnificent open parkland at the lower level.[citation needed]

The mansion purchased by the Government of Canada in 1957 for Can$54,000, served as the Canadian ambassadorial residence for fifty years until it was sold for Can$17.6 million in 2008, despite lobbying against the sale by former Ambassadors and Irish diaspora groups in Canada.[3]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Mystery buyer pays €7.5m for Canadian ambassador's home". The Irish Times. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Property to rent in Killiney, Dublin | Daft.ie". www.daft.ie.
  3. ^ "The Best Online Resource for Personal Finance and Business- Fair Whistle Blower". fairwhistleblower.ca.

53°15′37″N 6°06′54″W / 53.2603°N 6.115°W / 53.2603; -6.115