On Pat Liddy’s walking tours of Dublin the historian, author and artist describes Pimlico as a very traditional part of the Liberties where residents have maintained their identity.
Situated in the back yard of the Guinness brewery, it remains very much a self-contained part of the Liberties that hasn’t been affected by the development in the area, with nary a hipster cafe within sight.
![24 Pimlico, The Liberties, Dublin 8](https://www.irishtimes.com/resizer/v2/SSHNSZ3M2BBQUQITAL34JVIUIA.jpg?auth=1dfb5bc901013f6eff5a0b684fd3468780f98cd1bc8cbd12867f610d2d4018f8&width=800&height=450)
Number 24 is a three-storey redbrick property that stands a storey higher than the rest of the street and looks across to the green in front of the flats on Meath Place. At the other end of the redbrick terrace, a carbon copy of number 24 bookends the row.
With a retail unit at ground floor level and two self-contained one-bed units above, it offers someone with relatively deep pockets an opportunity to work and live over the shop.
![Ground-floor unit](https://www.irishtimes.com/resizer/v2/XPB6H74DVM4W2XOFHALAOECIA4.jpg?auth=2dc115c849f4cc0c02bea0462279433e9f78774b4a21bc84fc701bbdac180b1a&width=800&height=450)
![Kitchen area](https://www.irishtimes.com/resizer/v2/QPWVZFFM5DPUKONF2O7GU3HURM.jpg?auth=d16da72dbde47615b4ef3819c756f286ec0d3cc6af7315a0fdd2d6489b1b1632&width=800&height=450)
It’s a corner unit that fronts on to Pimlico with the entrance to the accommodation on Meath Place where there’s also access to a narrow yard, big enough to store bins and bikes.
Overall the two-bedroom, three-bathroom property extends to 101sq m (1,087sq ft). The ground-floor unit, which measures about 45sq m (484sq ft), comprises a front shop that leads through an office and on through to a kitchen where there is a toilet and a back door to the yard.
The first-floor flat is about 30sq m (323sq ft) in size. Its double bedroom is set to the front and has a tiled fireplace. The kitchen is to the back and opens out to a private, east-facing deck that extends to more than 18sq m, giving this property an unusually large outdoor space. The current rental income is €14,000 per annum and it includes a decent-sized shower room.
![Kitchen in first-floor apartment opening to terrace](https://www.irishtimes.com/resizer/v2/OTDXVLIGOANG6WNKQJ66YTAE4A.jpg?auth=693a41ba5007357e9a8ec9a0a2c8db7a667a5d9adb34f7cfc77dc5a3701a8caa&width=800&height=450)
![Terrace](https://www.irishtimes.com/resizer/v2/6BGVZXNHDQBH4GXVX3QCVK4P4Q.jpg?auth=561a2e90a56e792f8a7bc3cdb25c2fa2093b01f1a3109882f5ecd3da91d564e8&width=800&height=450)
On the second floor is another one-bedroom flat of 26sq m (280sq ft). The layout here sees the bedroom and shower room to the rear, its window framing a view of rooftops, and of the cathedral spires of both Christ Church and St Patrick’s. An open-plan living room-cum-kitchen spans the width of the property to the front. Its current rental income is €16,800, which is also the estimated rental value of the commercial unit.
The property, which has a Ber of E2, is seeking €650,000 through Lansdowne Partnership Estate Agents and could make a cool coffee shop with either two units or a two-bedroom two-storey duplex overhead, with some minor configurations.