1966 – Hume House, Northumberland Road, Dublin
Hume House is named after its developers, a UK based body called Hume Holdings. Originally the seven floors of office space were placed on columns but during a makeover in 1983,
Hume House is named after its developers, a UK based body called Hume Holdings. Originally the seven floors of office space were placed on columns but during a makeover in 1983,
Grim office block on an important corner site in Ballsbridge, Carrisbrook House was built on the site of a large Victorian house.
A massive development on the site of some large Victorian houses, Lansdowne House was the first headquarters of AIB in 1967.
The replacement building on the Pelican House site – designed to maximise the floor space on the property at the expense of open space and aesthetics.
Demolished in 2001, Downes Meehan & Robson’s headquarters for the Irish Life Assurance Company was one of the earliest office development outside of the city centre,
Now used by the City of Dublin Vocational Education Committee, the former Pembroke Town Hall was designed by E.H.
The former Former Masonic Girl’s School was redeveloped by Bewleys as an hotel in the 1990s,
A commercial headquarters on a US campus-style model with its heavily landscaped grounds, the AIB Bankgroup building was developed on lands belonging to the Royal Dublin Society across the road.
Selected after an architectural competition, the embassy is arranged around a central courtyard, a cloister-like space shaping the organisation of the plan.
According to the Four Seasons Hotel group who constructed it, this horrendous building “combines both Georgian and Victorian architectural styles”.
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