Built heritage •
Strokestown Park House The Palladian style
Strokestown Park House, built c.1740, is met by a winding avenue that begins at a gothic-style entrance at the beginning of the demesne. The house was sold to the Westward Garage Group in 1979, and was subsequently restored. Its stable wing is home to Ireland's first famine museum, opened in May 1994 by then President
Mary Robinson. •
Strokestown Park Gates A tripartite gate presents the Strokestown Park estate to the town laid out between 1810 and 1815 by Maurice Mahon. At almost one hundred and fifty feet wide, the main thoroughfare, leading up to the gates of the estate, was said to be the widest in Ireland at the time. The crow-stepped battlements belong to the "picturesque" style, in contrast to the restrained Classicism of the house. •
Church of the Immaculate Conception, Elphin Street - This Roman Catholic church was built between 1860 and 1863 on the site of an earlier structure, and was opened and blessed on 14 May 1863. It was built under the guidance of Fr Michael McDermott who was parish priest here from 1835 until his death. There is a plaque dedicated to him inside the church. The church was extensively modified in 1959/60. The church roof was lowered and two new bays were added to provide additional seating. The large scale renovation and extension of the church retained the altar, reredos and stained glass put in place by the original architect. • '''St. John's Church of Ireland, Church Street''' - This former Church of Ireland church was built in the 1820s, on the site of an earlier church dating from the eighteenth-century. The octagonal-shaped gothic church terminated function as a place of worship in the 1970s and is now home to the County Roscommon Heritage & Genealogy Centre. • '''St Mary's Catholic Church, Carniska''' - The church was built in 1840/1841 and partly rebuilt and remodelled in 1909/1910 and in 1954/1955. Local stonemasons built the walls using stones quarried from nearby. Prior to this the place of worship for the area was celebrated in a barn situated on the site where the old and former Carniska School of 1841 existed. This barn was acquired and converted into a thatched chapel. Its roof was blown off during the hurricane of 1839 and the Rev. John Boyd decided to have a new church build. •
The Magnet Ballroom, Elphin Street - "The Ballroom" opened on Easter Sunday, 26 April 1936. The opening performance was from the Strokestown Dramatic Group. Dance bands performed here over the years, attracting couples from far and wide having been one of the few ballrooms in the vicinity. In 1950, a competition was held for a name for the hall, and after many entries "The Magnet" was chosen. The ballroom closed in the late 1970s. In 1989, it was bought by Walsh Mushrooms and was used as a mushroom farm until 2003.
Derelict buildings As of 2021, a number of buildings on the main street in Strokestown lie vacant, representing (according to a 2021
Irish Times article) "architectural evidence of Strokestown’s decline". The growing number of derelict buildings has had a significant impact on Strokestown's streetscape. The town, which was once home to three department stores as well as three bank branches, is now home to none, with the last bank branch closing its doors in October 2021. The once "bustling weekly market" at the old Market House now houses just four stalls. ==Education==