1964 – General Accident Insurance, South Mall, Cork
Restrained piece of modernist infill on South Mall.
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.
Carroll’s of Grand Parade was designed and built in 1962-64 which was a period of great modernisation in Ireland both of society and of the city of Dublin.
One of the better buildings of the 1960s in Dublin is the office headquarters for the New Ireland Assurance Company on Dawson Street.
Constructed on the site of the Magdalen Asylum on Lower Leeson Street after an architectural competition in 1960.
A fine example of modern architecture in the heart of leafy Ballsbridge, the three storey over basement United States Embassy blends in well with the Victorian architecture of the area.
Miesian infill from Robin Walker of Michael Scott & Partners for the National Bank.
The last large Roman Catholic cathedral to be built in Ireland, and quite possibly the oddest in design.
The Opera House replaced an older building on this site that burned down in December 1955.
Fitzwilliam Street once the longest expanse of intact Georgian architecture anywhere in the world was destroyed in the 1960s when the ESB a supposedly responsible semi-state body wantonly demolished twelve of the houses.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.