The bridge itself forms the heart of the Ballsbridge suburb which extends northwards towards the Grand Canal along
Northumberland Road up to Haddington Road and
Shelbourne Road, southwards along the
Merrion Road towards Merrion and along
Anglesea Road towards
Donnybrook, and westwards to encompass the area around Pembroke Road,
Clyde Road, Elgin Road and
Herbert Park. The bridge was extensively modernised and widened by 24 feet in 1900 by
William Kaye-Parry.
Herbert Park, a public park, is thirty-two acres in size and is divided by a road, also called Herbert Park, and forms part of Ballsbridge's nebulous border with
Donnybrook. The
Royal Dublin Society (RDS) has its grounds here, and the
Lansdowne Road headquarters of the
Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) is on the boundary between Ballsbridge and
Irishtown. The corporate headquarters of
Allied Irish Banks (AIB) are also located in Ballsbridge. The former
Pembroke Town Hall is located to the immediate northwest of the RDS. ,
Victorian, and
Edwardian periods and is known for its high property prices Ailesbury Road, along with adjacent
Shrewsbury Road, contains the most expensive properties in
Dublin, and the roads are featured in the Irish edition of the board game
Monopoly. Shrewsbury Road was the sixth most expensive street in the world in 2007. Many of Dublin's embassies and diplomatic residences are located in the southern part of Ballsbridge on and around
Ailesbury Road. The
British, American, Italian, Spanish, Dutch and other embassies are located in the Ballsbridge area of Dublin. The U.S. embassy, an iconic cylindrical building, is a major landmark in present-day Ballsbridge. It was designed in 1955 by
John M. Johansen, Professor of Architecture at
Yale University. The project was 9 years in incubation and the building was inaugurated in 1964. ==Transport==