1931 – Christ the King, Turner’s Cross, Cork
According to Shane O’Toole, in a piece for The Sunday Times “Byrne (1883-1967),
According to Shane O’Toole, in a piece for The Sunday Times “Byrne (1883-1967),
Still extant today, with its distinctive Burton logotype on both facades,
The original building dates from the 1880s but in the late 1920s,
The home of Sir Cosmo Haskard who was Governor of the Falkland Islands in the 1960s and instrumental in the island remaining under British control when the government of the day was open to turning the islands over to Argentina.
Opened as a secondary school in 1932.
The former Savoy Cinema had a jazzy Art Deco façade but the interior was atmospheric in style.
Good quality stone faced, steel framed building with original shopfront and glazing intact.
New church constructed on site of church of 1749.
Designed by London engineers,
Unexecuted design from the 1930s for an airport for Cork City.