best irish building of 2009
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Anonymous.
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- January 20, 2010 at 4:22 pm #710945
Paul Clerkin
KeymasterSo what’s your nominations for the best building COMPLETED last year?
- January 20, 2010 at 4:55 pm #811356
Anonymous
Inactiveits going to be a very short list
- January 20, 2010 at 5:40 pm #811357
Anonymous
InactiveMaybe the Sean O Casey Community Centre in East Wall.. was that completed last year or 2008?
edit – seems like it was actually completed around September 2008, though not officially opened til February of 2009.
- January 20, 2010 at 6:31 pm #811358
Anonymous
InactiveI quite like the one at the corner of mount street and the canal
- January 20, 2010 at 7:58 pm #811359
Anonymous
Inactive@wearnicehats wrote:
I quite like the one at the corner of mount street and the canal
I was just going to say the same myself! It’s called “One Warrington Place”
There are a few images on Google of it and the estates agents brochure – no doubt it still remains empty!
- January 20, 2010 at 11:27 pm #811360
Anonymous
InactiveOne Warrington Place? Really? A bog standard HJL job? [If I sound condescending… I make no apologies]
Speaking of HJL, I’m not personally nominating it, far from it, but I’m sure someone will mention it, so we might as well get it out of the way….. the new criminal courts
……and I’m sure someone will also mention that blasted convention centre… now, thats out of the way as well.
If we were to broaden it to “structures” rather then strictly buildings, then perhaps we could consider the Samuel Beckett bridge?
I’m really searching to end on a positive here… I would second the Sean O’ Casey centre but unfortunately I do think that was 2008. Their Gaelaras in Derry was finished recently though I haven’t seen it up close…
- January 20, 2010 at 11:50 pm #811361
Anonymous
InactiveHaha – once One Warrington Place was mentioned I ran for cover. One could hear spoil_sport’s strident footsteps from the far end of the Archiseek corridor.
Thank goodness Trinity Point hasn’t been mentioned yet. Oops.
- January 21, 2010 at 9:22 am #811362
Anonymous
InactiveThe two houses in Ballsbridge by Taka were lovely. Leixlip Garda Station was great too.
- January 21, 2010 at 2:23 pm #811363
Anonymous
Inactive@spoil_sport wrote:
One Warrington Place? Really? A bog standard HJL job? [If I sound condescending… I make no apologies]
Speaking of HJL, I’m not personally nominating it, far from it, but I’m sure someone will mention it, so we might as well get it out of the way….. the new criminal courts
……and I’m sure someone will also mention that blasted convention centre… now, thats out of the way as well.
If we were to broaden it to “structures” rather then strictly buildings, then perhaps we could consider the Samuel Beckett bridge?
I’m really searching to end on a positive here… I would second the Sean O’ Casey centre but unfortunately I do think that was 2008. Their Gaelaras in Derry was finished recently though I haven’t seen it up close…
I don’t reallllly think you can call it bog standard. It’s well articulated with a dramatic roofline (I think the overhanging roof is actually bronze). I sense an anti-commercial sentiment here – we can’t give awards to box-extensions all our lives
I’m even more surprised at your mention of the convention centre – a mind bogglingly crude pimple on the arse of the quays. now if we were giving awards in the “best building that looks like a barrel of nuclear waste tipped over onto a cardboard box” category then……
- January 21, 2010 at 2:42 pm #811364
Anonymous
Inactivei think Derek Tynans (DTA) new social housing scheme is pretty decent, its up in Santry. Its under residential, and Santry Demense on their website. I have yet to go visit it, but for social housing it seems exceptional.
- January 21, 2010 at 2:50 pm #811365
Anonymous
InactiveI’m sorry wearnicehats, but it is bog standard, a barrell corner bit and a stick-y-out roof bit a great building do not make; and even if it is a little more than that, that still does not warrant a place on “best irish building of 2009”; nor did I mention any box extensions.
I also think you misunderstood my sentiments towards the convention centre; on that we are in complete agreement.
- January 21, 2010 at 3:07 pm #811366
Anonymous
Inactive@ba wrote:
i think Derek Tynans (DTA) new social housing scheme is pretty decent, its up in Santry. Its under residential, and Santry Demense on their website. I have yet to go visit it, but for social housing it seems exceptional.
That looks very promising alright. The street part of it looks a bit stark but I’m sure there are some more trees on the way. It’d be nice if they’d throw up some drawings and internal views on their site.
- January 21, 2010 at 3:15 pm #811367
Anonymous
Inactiveanother housing scheme that isn’t bad is the Fatima Mansions replacement scheme, can’t remember the new name.
pic from the recent artic episode.Can’t think of the architects, . . . . proabably some combination of three letters
- January 21, 2010 at 3:39 pm #811368
Anonymous
Inactiveits all about the brick for me this year no doubt:
TAKA two houses: http://www.taka.ie/001-01.html http://www.taka.ie/002-01.html
and Timberyard by OD+T: http://www.odonnell-tuomey.ie/webpage/timberyard/timberyard_05.htm
- January 21, 2010 at 4:26 pm #811369
Paul Clerkin
KeymasterI really like the TAKA houses myself. Could live there happily.
- January 21, 2010 at 6:34 pm #811370
Anonymous
Inactive@spoil_sport wrote:
I’m sorry wearnicehats, but it is bog standard, a barrell corner bit and a stick-y-out roof bit a great building do not make; and even if it is a little more than that, that still does not warrant a place on “best irish building of 2009”; nor did I mention any box extensions.
I also think you misunderstood my sentiments towards the convention centre; on that we are in complete agreement.
ok just to ensure I don’t disgrace myself again – example of 3 non “bog standard” offices please
- January 21, 2010 at 7:06 pm #811371
Anonymous
InactiveMy top three buildings:
- January 21, 2010 at 8:28 pm #811372
Anonymous
Inactivere: non bog standard offices – off the top of my head:
STW – Riverside One
Donnelly Turpin – Irish Times offices on Tara St
deBlacham Meagher – Grand Canal Quay and their own offices on St Catherine’s Lane
I could go on…There is nothing about the composition of one warrington place to sugest that it was put together with anything more than average competency.
I think Copo is onto something; I had forgotten about the Carlow Arts Centre, yes a definite contender, but not by an Irish architect, should we hold that against it?
- January 21, 2010 at 10:20 pm #811373
Anonymous
InactiveCarlow Arts Centre is architecture that doesn’t believe in itself.
- January 22, 2010 at 2:13 am #811374
Anonymous
Inactive@Copo wrote:
My top three buildings:
1.An Gaelaras – BD ArticleIt looks like a fancy prison i’m sure we all know why the mullions are so close…
The building is not cultural but the people might be i’m sure ornate precast would have been cheaper.ornate and crime… gimme a brake
- January 22, 2010 at 9:10 am #811375
Anonymous
Inactivespoil_sport wrote:re: non bog standard offices – off the top of my head:
STW – Riverside One
Donnelly Turpin – Irish Times offices on Tara St
deBlacham Meagher – Grand Canal Quay and their own offices on St Catherine’s Lane
I could go on…please don’t – architecturally we won’t agree on any of those being anything other than bog standard
STW????????????
QUOTE]
- January 22, 2010 at 10:47 am #811376
Anonymous
InactiveIs a Poll in order ????????
- January 22, 2010 at 11:23 am #811377
Anonymous
InactiveIs a critique in order ?
- January 22, 2010 at 3:25 pm #811378
Anonymous
InactiveGaelaras in Derry, in particular the internal spaces, looks wonderful although I have minor misgivings about the yellow painted windows – the colour is a little bit reminiscent of that radioactive orange that a lot of cheap “Rationel” type windows come in. It’s interesting that they are still considering whether or not to paint the whole facade red as was shown in the original renders. It’s nice that John Tuomey isn’t afraid of expressing his own doubts about the success or otherwise of the facade in the BD article. Personally I think the exposed concrete looks great.
Carlow Arts Centre is very admirable on a number of levels but a visit left me rather unimpressed. It’s spaces and particularly it’s external expression lack any humanizing qualities or concessions to context leaving it feeling quite bland and disconnected from the life of the town.
- January 27, 2010 at 12:27 pm #811379
Anonymous
InactiveI can’t believe somebody said they like that big corporate glass pig at Mount Street Bridge 😮
Not this year, but this recent building, below, at Baggot Street bridge has hardly got a mention anywhere since being built. It’s a good example of developing beside a protected structure, the Victorian redbrick.
It’s not perfect – the top floor should have been pulled back from the chimney stack of the old building – but it’s pretty good.
- January 27, 2010 at 1:09 pm #811380
Anonymous
InactiveI hate to be the asshole, I do, but again, really? I think there might be a very good reason why it has hardly got a mention anywhere….
I can’t really tell what makes this corporate stone pig any better than the “corporate glass pig” mentioned earlier, except for the utterly pointless and annoying metal frame and louvres on the other side not shown in the picture above, but they are randomly placed so that makes it trendy and therefore ok. - January 27, 2010 at 1:40 pm #811381
Anonymous
Inactive@spoil_sport wrote:
I can’t really tell what makes this corporate stone pig any better than the “corporate glass pig” mentioned earlier.
:eek::eek: The person who designed the Mount St. Bridge pig knows nothing about designing a building in an historic setting.
The building at Baggot Street Bridge is that increasingly rare thing: an architect designed building which recedes from the protected struture, does not dominate it.
I should admit that I am thinking of the building in contextual terms, as I am wan to do, rather than as a one off work of architecture which will keep the AAI and IA in covers for a year.
- January 27, 2010 at 1:51 pm #811382
Anonymous
InactiveI will retract to an extent. I didn’t mean to imply that the building is without some qualities, it does some things well; its scale and massing are acceptable and colour is a good fit; but the expression, particularly the metal frame stuck to the front elevation, the pointless louvres, the proportions of opes and the stripes, dosen’t work and is compounded by some poor quality fenestration; nor does it meet the criteria of “completed in 2009” or “best” by any stretch.
…worth a special mention perhaps… but not a winner. - January 28, 2010 at 9:46 am #811383
Anonymous
InactiveI’m with spoil sport’s earlier guise on this one – this is actually a particularly atrocious building i have many times passed it and shuddered. a scraping pass at the very best a special mention is kindness in the extreme.
But lets get back onto the topic of good things built in 2009 – its all to easy to slip back into lambasting rubbish buildings.
- January 28, 2010 at 12:02 pm #811384
Anonymous
InactiveWell we all know whay YOU’RE like by now (:D)
BTW the building on Thomas Court beside St. Catherine’s Church which won your precious approval has just had a pasting from the planning appeals board.
- January 28, 2010 at 5:59 pm #811385
Anonymous
InactiveLike planners know thier arse from thier elbow about architecture outside thier “architecture by numbers” rule-book…………..
- January 28, 2010 at 11:05 pm #811386
Anonymous
Inactive@Devin wrote:
:eek::eek: The person who designed the Mount St. Bridge pig knows nothing about designing a building in an historic setting.
The building at Baggot Street Bridge is that increasingly rare thing: an architect designed building which recedes from the protected struture, does not dominate it.
I should admit that I am thinking of the building in contextual terms, as I am wan to do, rather than as a one off work of architecture which will keep the AAI and IA in covers for a year.
hardly historic. your mates in AFT didn’t even bother
- January 29, 2010 at 12:27 am #811387
Anonymous
InactiveIt’s borderline … on the one hand in the Gnd. Canal office district / Mount St. 1970s write off and on the other in the older area ..
But I’m still shocked you like the building no matter where it is … - January 29, 2010 at 11:17 am #811388
Anonymous
Inactive - January 29, 2010 at 1:57 pm #811389
Anonymous
InactiveUL President’s Humble 😀 Lodgings ?
http://www.clarecoco.ie/idocsweb/ViewFiles.aspx?docid=188600&format=djvu
>> p35/46 [Explorer browser only and DejaVu viewer installed.]
- January 29, 2010 at 8:52 pm #811390
Anonymous
InactiveI will have to admit i’m feeling jaded…
Some countries spent 40 million euro you could almost buy a national monument for that… - January 30, 2010 at 11:43 pm #811391
Anonymous
Inactivesome snaps of the Mount Street corner block [1 Warrington Place, I think]
I don’t think it’s fair to dump on this block, it’s just the architectural manifestation of over-blown speculative greed
It might be big, brash and blingy and gives a masterclass in creating awkward junctions, but as a pick-n-mix of iconic features from the modern movement back catalogue, it’s kinda fun :rolleyes:
- January 31, 2010 at 7:24 pm #811392
admin
Keymastermad looking yoke!
- February 1, 2010 at 10:08 am #811393
Anonymous
InactiveNot to mention the attached…….
This is just HJL’s biggest problem. they dont know when enough is enough. additional elevation treatments a better piece of architecture does not make.
- February 1, 2010 at 3:16 pm #811394
Anonymous
Inactive@gunter wrote:
It doesn’t look too bad in those pictures …… but when you see it in its location it’s inappropriately self-important.
…….. It’s an architectural photographer’s building – that’s about the best you could say about it imo.
- February 1, 2010 at 3:33 pm #811395
Anonymous
InactiveIs this my fault? By dignifying the original post with a response did I give this unholy mess of a building the legs it now has? I can’t understand how this is still being discussed in the context of “best Irish building”, negative or otherwise.
Let’s move on….
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