1992 – Ashtown Visitor Centre & Castle, Phoenix Park, Dublin
The oldest building in the park is Ashtown Castle, a restored medieval tower house dating from the 15th century.
The oldest building in the park is Ashtown Castle, a restored medieval tower house dating from the 15th century.
This development was the final part of a controversial project lasting over twenty years. The site at Wood Quay had been earmarked as a site for the headquarters of Dublin Corporation since the 1950s.
The Irish Waterways Visitor Centre is located in one of the waterways it celebrates –
The original Temple Bar Studios were located in a former clothing factory. This purpose built premises contains thirty artist’s studios in a range of sizes (available for artists to rent) and the gallery.
The Arthouse building is sited on Dublin’s newest street – the imaginatively named Curved Street.
The Ark is Europe’s first cultural centre for children and contains a gallery,
Selected after an architectural competition, the embassy is arranged around a central courtyard, a cloister-like space shaping the organisation of the plan.
Redevelopment of earlier office building from 1990. Moloney O’Beirne Architects increased the floorplate of the building by extending it back to the original streetline.
The Irish Photography Centre contains three main elements – the Dublin Institute of Photography, the National Photographic Archives and the Gallery of Photography.
The Irish Photography Centre contains three main elements – the Dublin Institute of Photography, the National Photographic Archives and the Gallery of Photography.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.