2005 – Aer Lingus Headquarters, Dublin Airport
Proposal for an office development at Dublin Airport designed to be a headquarters for Aer Lingus.
Proposal for an office development at Dublin Airport designed to be a headquarters for Aer Lingus.
The refurbishment and extension of the Library in Baldoyle to include a Local Government Office for Fingal County Council services provides the opportunity to reassess the relationship between these public functions and the village of Baldoyle.
A further extension to the earlier building by Grafton Architects, completed in 1996, the Mechanical Engineering Building now features a raised podium with an opening around a pre-existing tree.
This pedestrian bridge, which links Custom House Quay with City Quay, is named after the Dublin writer Sean O’Casey.
Started, with basement and foundation later filled in, with a view to restarting construction at a later date.
Unbuilt proposal by Ashlin Coleman to replace the Royal Dublin Hotel on O’Connell Street with a more modern and upmarket hotel.
Hair-brained idea for an “iconic” tourist attraction that would run from Dublin’s Docklands west to Heuston Station – destroying views of some of Gandon’s iconic Dublin works.
In 1999 city architect Jim Barrett commissioned David Mackay, of Barcelona architects MBM to design a building for the site,
Speculative design for an eco-living development in Dublin called Bifrost. Arranged as a continuous unbroken building, the building is split up into a series of different areas that offer a total of 186,000 square meters of high density mixed-use space.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.