1972 – Canada House, St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin
Replacing four Georgian houses, Nos.65-68, which were demolished in 1968. Canada House was designed by Tyndall Hogan Hurley and so-named due to its major tenants –
Replacing four Georgian houses, Nos.65-68, which were demolished in 1968. Canada House was designed by Tyndall Hogan Hurley and so-named due to its major tenants –
Originally, at the time of completion, the ground floor area was open, the building being raised on columns.
Another Catholic church constructed during the reign of Archbishop John Charles McQuaid in the Dublin suburbs.
Office building, on a site high above streetlevel adjacent to Harcourt Street railway station. Now demolished.
Originally a piece of daring infill on the ‘Green’, the immediate impact was lessened by the demolition of the building next door and redevelopment in a similar Miesian style to the original.
Originally Dublin International Hotel, now the Clarion Hotel Dublin Airport after many ownership changes and rebranding.
Horrendous speculative office block developed in the early 1970s – wildly out of scale with the surroundings.
Massive scheme for a central business district centred on the area of Moore and Parnell Street. The landbank amassed meant the removal of the historic street pattern and is now the site of the ILAC centre,
Truly horrific materials, design, and massing marks this waste of a fantastic site along a busy street and abutting Trinity College.
A soulless 1960s cinema that is partially on the site of two of Dublin’s most famous theatres: the massive Theatre Royal and the smaller Regal Theatre next door.
NOTE: Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - this will only display location of buildings on this page.