1932 – No. 32 (Vera Moda) St. Patrick’s Street, Cork
Good quality stone faced, steel framed building with original shopfront and glazing intact. The fine shopfront has a wrought iron balcony with clock over the main entrance.
Good quality stone faced, steel framed building with original shopfront and glazing intact. The fine shopfront has a wrought iron balcony with clock over the main entrance.
Unexecuted design from the 1930s for an airport for Cork City. Over the years, a number of sites were considered for both an airport for landplanes and a seaplane base.
The City Hall was opened in 1936 and replaced the previous structure that was burned down on 11 September 1920.
Unusual church embedded into the streetscape following existing parapet and street lines. With its cut stone and Hiberno_Romanesque doorway,
Former factory built for the Jennings family who moved their factory from Browne Street in the city centre.
Fine 1950s convent complex still largely intact. The main architectural feature being the nuns small chapel which is expressed externally in the massing and with its large stained glass window clearly visible,
Restrained piece of modernist infill on South Mall.
Constructed as a bottling and storage facility by Cork Distillers Co., which was used by Irish Distillers until 2007.
The Opera House replaced an older building on this site that burned down in December 1955.
As the Thompson family expanded their thriving bakery business in the 1960s, they chose to make a bold architectural statement as they dedicated the western portion of the building to the production of their swiss roll.