1943 – St. Augustine’s Catholic Church, Cork

Architect: Dominic O’Connor

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Church embedded into the streetscape following the existing parapet and property lines. With its cut stone and Hiberno-Romanesque doorway, the church could be easily ignored as a piece of catholic institutional architecture, except for its unusual window arrangment. The original church on the site was originally by George Pain, with this newer church constructed between 1937-1943.

The church has two large and striking windows by Gabriel Loire (1904-96), completed about 1972. These windows measure 12.5 metres in height and about 2 metres wide; the glass is solid coloured, not stained, glass. This glass is approximately 26 millimetres thick and is described as “dalle-de-verre”, flagstones of glass, set in concrete and forming an integral load-bearing part of the building.

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APA Format:
Clerkin, Paul (2009, November 6). *1943 – St. Augustine’s Catholic Church, Cork*. Archiseek.com. https://www.archiseek.com/1943-st-augustines-catholic-church-cork/ (Updated 2026, March 13)
MLA Format:
Clerkin, Paul. "1943 – St. Augustine’s Catholic Church, Cork." *Archiseek.com*, 6 Nov. 2009, https://www.archiseek.com/1943-st-augustines-catholic-church-cork/. Updated 13 Mar. 2026.

Published November 6, 2009 | Last Updated March 13, 2026

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