Vertigo? U2 tower to be taller

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    • #707639
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Docks tower could rise higher
      Frank McDonald, Environment Editor

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority wants to raise the height of the proposed U2 tower to 100 metres, only 20 metres lower than the Spire.

      The docklands authority is involved in talks with Mr Liam Carroll, the city’s most prolific developer, on the building of the twisting tower of apartments planned for a site at Britain Quay at the mouth of the River Dodder.

      A competition for the tower was jointly sponsored in 2003 by the authority and U2, whose new recording studio is to be on top of it. This will replace their old studios in a warehouse on Hanover Quay, which is to be demolished.

      The tower was to be 60 metres high but its height would be raised by 40 metres under an amended planning scheme for the Grand Canal Docks area.

      Because of the need to maintain its “slenderness ratio”, the taller building would also be somewhat bulkier than the original proposal by two firms of architects based in Blackrock, Co Dublin.

      This would make it more economical to build.

      It will be up to the Minister for the Environment, Mr Roche, to decide whether to permit the significant increase in height following a public consultation period on the amended scheme, which is expected to to be exhibited in March.

      The design for the tower emerged as the winner of an international architectural competition in mid-2003, which attracted more than 500 entries. The docklands authority sees it as a “unique and remarkable landmark”.

      The name of the original winner was somehow mislaid and the jury subsequently decided to award first place to Burdon Dunne Architects and Craig Henry Architects. One of the principals, Mr Felim Dunne, is a brother-in-law of U2’s manager, Mr Paul McGuinness.

      It is understood that the Dublin Docklands Development Authority has decided to go for a taller tower on the site, a pivotal one in the area, after getting a sceptical reaction from developers about the economic feasibility of the original proposal.

      A professional team of structural engineers, quantity surveyors and mechanical and electrical engineers is being selected to collaborate with the architects on the proposed tower, which would contain about 100 apartments.

      The authority intends to give the building section 25 status, which would enable the developer to avail of lucrative tax reliefs to offset the capital cost, one of the reasons it is believed that Mr Carroll is keen to build it.

      Mr Carroll’s property company, Dunloe Ewart, owns the adjoining Hammond Lane site on Sir John Rogerson’s Quay. Dunloe Ewart has planning permission to redevelop the site, including an office tower rising to 100 metres.

      However, Mr Carroll is said to have no interest in building the office tower as designed and has replaced the architects with another firm.

      The sail-like tower on the Hammond Lane site was designed by Ó Muire Smyth, a firm jointly headed by Mr John Smyth, younger brother of the former Dunloe Ewart chief, Mr Noel Smyth. O’Mahony Pike (OMP) has since taken over the Hammond Lane project.

      Principally through Zoe Developments Ltd, Mr Carroll has built more apartments in Dublin than any other developer. He designed all his earlier projects himself with the aid of a team of architectural technicians.

      Widely criticised as “shoebox” schemes, they included major apartment blocks on Francis Street, Arran Quay, Bridge Street and Bachelors Walk.

      He once claimed that architects were “only interested in designing penthouses for fellows with Mercs”.

      It was only when it came to the Millennium Tower on Charlotte Quay that Zoe hired architects. OMP has since worked for Mr Carroll on a variety of other developments, all of which require more sophistication than he showed in the past.

      In November 1997, High Court judge Mr Justice Peter Kelly described him as “a disgrace to the construction industry” and Zoe Developments as a “recidivist criminal” for consistent breaches of health and safety regulations.

      The judge had ordered work to cease on the company’s Charlotte Quay site after a 24-year- old building worker, James Masterson, was killed and a subsequent inspection by the Health and Safety Authority had noted 13 breaches of health and safety regulations.

      Mr Carroll’s current projects include such major schemes as Cherrywood – in effect, the creation of a new town in the Carrickmines Valley, off the N11 – and the redevelopment of Loreto Abbey in Rathfarnham.

      In the case of U2’s tower, it is believed that Mr Carroll would be prepared to build it if the docklands authority agrees to permit a revised scheme for the adjoining Hammond Lane site, which would be sufficiently dense to justify not proceeding with another tower there.

      “There is room for only one landmark tower at the end of the quays in Docklands and it has to be the U2 one,” said one well-informed source

    • #750112
      sw101
      Participant

      wow………

    • #750113
      shadow
      Participant

      Here we go again.

      If the competition were properly judged to begin with, maybe issues such as feasibility would have been sorted out. The suggestion that by “inflating” this project will improve its performance is incredible since the footprint of the site is the restricting parameter.

    • #750114
      Andrew Duffy
      Participant

      Is the fact that the DDDA is talking to Liam Carroll, owner of the adjacent site, an indication that it realises the site footprint is too small? Also, if the site footprint and/or the shoulder height is changed, don’t other entrants now have a right to sue for the costs of entering the competition?
      How was the original muck-up sorted out, or was it?

    • #750115
      sw101
      Participant

      @Andrew Duffy wrote:

      Is the fact that the DDDA is talking to Liam Carroll, owner of the adjacent site, an indication that it realises the site footprint is too small? Also, if the site footprint and/or the shoulder height is changed, don’t other entrants now have a right to sue for the costs of entering the competition?
      How was the original muck-up sorted out, or was it?

      why should they sue? the competition was staged and enterred upon certain criteria. admittedly the winner wasn’t the best entry, nor was the jury system transparent. but surely the DDDA have the right to alter the winning design to suit changing requirements? i would imagine all entries signed away the right to regain any expenditure or entrance fees.

    • #750116
      GrahamH
      Participant

      The tower next door hopefully being ditched is excellent news.
      As for the extra height & bulk for U2, as long as the design can absorb it then fair enough – but also as long as this will be deemed one of those ubiquitous ‘landmark’ buildings and will not set the level for the area.
      It’s going to look fantastic next to the water there.

    • #750117
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Fabulous site but I still think that this is a sexier building….

      http://www.irish-architecture.com/unbuilt_ireland/dublin/u2_tower/3w/index.html

    • #750118
      sw101
      Participant
    • #750119
      Mob79
      Participant

      Does anyone else feel the winning building is one of the most disgusting buildings ever? And it just got bigger, oh god.

    • #750120
      sw101
      Participant

      it is a pretty appalling piece of ugly. the high concept rotational stuff is straight out of a calatrava sketch-book, but lacks any of the finesse or detail.

    • #750121
      d_d_dallas
      Participant

      The OMS scheme with full P.P. that’s being shunted is far better than this.

    • #750122
      sw101
      Participant

    • #750123
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      i am new to this forum … and I am not an architect either, sorry – just an italian bloke living in dublin and passionate about great architecture.

      i am looking for any publications available in hard-copy (book, catalogue, blueprints, etc.) regarding the U2 / Landmark Tower Competition, that I can buy to add to my personal collection.

      tried both websites of craighenry.com and ddda.ie but no luck.

      any help will be very much appreciated.

      thanks,
      roby

    • #750124
      sw101
      Participant

      the brief and some of the losing entries are hear (aswell as the winner)

      http://www.irish-architecture.com/unbuilt_ireland/dublin/u2_tower/index.html

    • #750125
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      @sw101 wrote:

      the brief and some of the losing entries are hear (aswell as the winner)

      http://www.irish-architecture.com/unbuilt_ireland/dublin/u2_tower/index.html

      thanks shaggy, but anything available in hard copy …
      i work with pcs and keyboards every day, i’d like to have some old-fashioned paper-based material to read in the evening

      thanks a mil,
      roby

    • #750126
      sw101
      Participant

      ring the ddda. or print off some images.

    • #750127
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      @roby wrote:

      i am new to this forum … and I am not an architect either, sorry – just an italian bloke living in dublin and passionate about great architecture.

      thats a lot of us – quite a few here are not architects just interested (wo)men in the street

    • #750128
      trace
      Participant

      Sorry, but nothing in hardcopy was ever published by DDDA or others, apart from a stapled, photocopied text list of the entries by number and name (at the time of the public exhibition in Clarion Quay) and a postcard with an image of the winning, ‘twisting tower’ design. Best print off the pages from this site – there were lots!

    • #750129
      Lotts
      Participant

      It can be tricky finding information on the DDDA site. Sometimes the interesting documents are not linked to from their main pages. You could try looking in the uploads directory using a search similar to this one
      Google for U2 in /uploads
      As these tend to be pdfs they will print well and provide roby with plenty of bedtime reading!

      Here’s another doc that doesn’t seem to have been indexed yet by google.
      Tender to complete u2 tower (memo)

    • #750130
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      PRESS RELEASE

      World-Class Developers and Design Teams Sought for Landmark U2 Tower and
      Britain Quay Development

      Dublin Docklands Development Authority is seeking expressions of interest
      from world-class development teams, who have significant experience in the
      delivery of high rise towers of architectural merit, to compete for a
      unique development opportunity to design, construct and finance the U2
      Tower and Britain Quay Development.

      The Tower, which is over 100 metres high, consists of approximately 20,000
      square metres of mainly residential space and will also be the home of the
      rock band U2’s recording studio. The adjacent Britain Quay Development
      will be approximately 11,500 square metres and will contain a mix of uses
      including leisure, residential, commercial, arts and culture uses.

      Both developments will reside at the confluence of three waterways, the
      River Liffey, River Dodder and Grand Canal, and will be served by specially
      designed boardwalks and marinas.

      Last month, the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local
      Government, Mr. Dick Roche, TD, approved the increase in the height of the
      U2 Tower to 100 metres. This approval was part of a larger Grand Canal
      Dock Planning Scheme (Amendment) which will result in approximately 430
      residential units and 53,000m² of commercial development being attracted to
      this area of Docklands. Overall the Grand Canal Dock area will see the
      construction of up to 3,700 residential units, 20% of which will be Social
      and Affordable Housing.

      “The U2 Tower will provide a unique and remarkable architectural icon for
      Docklands and the city of Dublin. This project presents an exciting
      development opportunity to deliver a key landmark project in Docklands,
      which is at the forefront of local, national and international design
      innovation and will create an enduring landmark in the capital,” said Paul
      Maloney, Chief Executive, Docklands Authority.

      “The U2 Tower is one of the most significant architectural projects to be
      delivered in the regeneration of Docklands and combined with the recently
      approved planning scheme for 100 metre tower on the north side of the
      Liffey, the Watchtower, will form a dramatic architectural gateway into
      Dublin city,” said Lar Bradshaw, Chairman of the Docklands Authority.

      The U2 Tower is part of the Grand Canal Dock area, where the Docklands
      Authority are working with some of the worlds leading architects on
      projects such as the Daniel Libeskind-designed Grand Canal Theatre, the
      Manuel Aires Mateus designed five star hotel, and Martha Swartz designed
      public plaza, Grand Canal Square. Together with developers the Docklands
      Authority is delivering some of the most creative construction projects in
      the country.

      The Docklands Authority is seeking developers to provide development
      services including the design, construction and finance of the U2 Tower and
      adjacent Britain Quay Development. Developers are invited to submit
      expressions of interest demonstrating significant previous experience of
      design team members in delivering high rise tower developments of over 100
      metres high.

      It is expected that the successful development team will be selected in
      2007 and the construction of the Tower will commence in 2008. The closing
      date for receipt of Request for Proposals is 12 noon, on the 16th October
      2006.

    • #750131
      paul h
      Participant

      i may be missing something but which is it??
      [ATTACH]2588[/ATTACH]

      or is it –
      [ATTACH]2589[/ATTACH]
      edit – i see now they’re actuallty the same!
      edit – is the ‘watchtower’ the stw apt building at point village

    • #750132
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      Why don’t they pull the spire out of O’Connell St., and stick it on top of the U2 Tower? Not only will it improve the look of the capitals main thoroughfare, but it will double the height of this ‘landmark building’. 🙂

    • #750133
      shadow
      Participant

      Will the “watchtower” be the HQ for the Jehovah’s witnesses in Ireland?

    • #750134
      lostexpectation
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      PRESS RELEASE

      The Docklands Authority is seeking developers to provide development
      services including the design, construction and finance of the U2 Tower and
      adjacent Britain Quay Development. Developers are invited to submit
      expressions of interest demonstrating significant previous experience of
      design team members in delivering high rise tower developments of over 100
      metres high.

      It is expected that the successful development team will be selected in
      2007 and the construction of the Tower will commence in 2008. The closing
      date for receipt of Request for Proposals is 12 noon, on the 16th October
      2006.

      so they are looking for people to design a tower while they keep showing us pictures of tower that hasn’t been designed yet?

    • #750135
      a boyle
      Participant

      @lostexpectation wrote:

      so they are looking for people to design a tower while they keep showing us pictures of tower that hasn’t been designed yet?

      This has me completely confused … they are currently digging the foundations for the tower . Does anybody know what is going on ?

    • #750136
      jimg
      Participant

      As for the extra height & bulk for U2, as long as the design can absorb it then fair enough – but also as long as this will be deemed one of those ubiquitous ‘landmark’ buildings and will not set the level for the area.

      Why? I really dislike the aesthetics and even the idea of ‘landmark’ standalone towers which dominate entire areas of the city. Someone in the other thread posted a series of photos of European cities which have tall buildings. The ones which adopted a “clustered” approach to tall buildings – Frankfurt, Paris, etc. – are far more appealling than having individual towers dispersed around a generally low rise city. I’d rather have this, the Point “tower”, Heuston Gate, the Barrow St./Thomas St./Tara St./etc. proposals all bunched together somewhere down the docks instead of ending up with having the low rise historic bits of the city compromised by “landmark” towers.

    • #750137
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      weve been through this before but i agree. clustered areas of high rise make more visual and econnmic sense. It would allow Dublin to develop and still keep the charecter of the city. Paris/ La defence is the classic example of co existence.

    • #750138
      Keen
      Participant

      @a boyle wrote:

      This has me completely confused … they are currently digging the foundations for the tower . Does anybody know what is going on ?

      where did you hear this? in the july 16th report on ddda.ie they were looking for developers who would focus on the street level of the tower as the nearby streets are prone to flooding, so how can the foundation be underway already if there is no developer picked?

    • #750139
      a boyle
      Participant

      i was down there a week ago. they are busy digging like mad . in light of the papers i have no idea what they are doing.

    • #750140
      Morlan
      Participant

      Boyler, if you’re down there again ask one of the builders what they’re doing. It’s possible that they are just excavating the whole site in preperation for the new developments.

    • #750141
      a boyle
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      Boyler, if you’re down there again ask one of the builders what they’re doing. It’s possible that they are just excavating the whole site in preperation for the new developments.

      i ‘ll consider it. i don’t think the local natives are particularly gratefull for every tom dick and harry going by to have a look, and these natives are particularly mobile , and. … … …

    • #750142
      Keen
      Participant

      @a boyle wrote:

      i ‘ll consider it. i don’t think the local natives are particularly gratefull for every tom dick and harry going by to have a look, and these natives are particularly mobile , and. … … …

      well if they’re excavating the site, i wonder who is paying for it? unless these broadsheet reports are well out of date…

    • #750143
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      They’re looking for ancient books of psalms and other religious curios

    • #750144
      a boyle
      Participant

      perhaps the site is split into different parts ?

    • #750145
      Keen
      Participant

      @The Denouncer wrote:

      They’re looking for ancient books of psalms and other religious curios

      more likely bodies encased in concrete :p

      did anyone see this image of both u2 and point towers?

    • #750146
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      They will look great flanking the Sam Beckett Bridge.

    • #750147
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      The Samuel Beckett Bridge will be a bit further down the quays as far as I know.

    • #750148
      Anonymous
      Participant

      Point Tower, eh gotham city anyone ?? judging by that render anyway !

      any more detailed renders ?

    • #750149
      Morlan
      Participant

      Anyone got a bigger picture of that Point Village render above?

    • #750150
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      Anyone got a bigger picture of that Point Village render above?

      You can have a look on the (Beano comic inspired) website http://www.pointvillage.ie They’ve got balloons !!!

    • #750151
      GregF
      Participant

      ha ha, good one ….that’s hilarious!

      (…a place of worship and all there.)

    • #750152
      Keen
      Participant

      @GregF wrote:

      ha ha, good one ….that’s hilarious!

      Hardly an apt advertisment for something supposedly to be the bees nees

      thanks for the link RC…

      Well it looks better than the original image…glass elevators? I like the slanted roof, (i hate flat roofs on tallish buildings)

      Pity we can’t get a larger image of the rendering, to give us a proper look instead of the cartoony image on the site 🙂

    • #750153
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      I always said there should be more advertising blimps in the city

    • #750154
      Morlan
      Participant

      I wonder who’s going to grab the TV studio at the top with the fine views.

      I see the East Link roundabout is getting a makeover too.

    • #750155
      urbanisto
      Participant

      Considering how dramtic and realistic many development proposals can look, this one looks plain silly…perhaps refreshingly so.

    • #750156
      jackwade
      Participant

      Huh? Whats this proposed U2 experience then?

    • #750157
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      For me this is the most interesting part of this:

      It is expected that the successful development team will be selected in 2007 and the construction of the Tower will commence in 2008. The closing date for receipt of Request for Proposals is 12 noon, on the 16th October 2006.

      so the building won’t start for two years at least….

    • #750158
      kite
      Participant
      Paul Clerkin wrote:
      Docks tower could rise higher
      Frank McDonald, Environment Editor
      A competition for the tower was jointly sponsored in 2003 by the authority and U2, whose new recording studio is to be on top of it. This will replace their old studios in a warehouse on Hanover Quay, which is to be demolished.

      😮 Whatever about the pros or cons of the U2 tower does anybody feel that knocking the old recording studio on Hanover Quay is akin to knocking the Cavern in Liverpool or the Sun Studio in Memphis?

    • #750159
      lostexpectation
      Participant

      I heard the want to move the tower to holland

    • #750160
      GrahamH
      Participant

      Where lostexpectation?

      @jimg wrote:

      Why? I really dislike the aesthetics and even the idea of ‘landmark’ standalone towers which dominate entire areas of the city. Someone in the other thread posted a series of photos of European cities which have tall buildings. The ones which adopted a “clustered” approach to tall buildings – Frankfurt, Paris, etc. – are far more appealling than having individual towers dispersed around a generally low rise city. I’d rather have this, the Point “tower”, Heuston Gate, the Barrow St./Thomas St./Tara St./etc. proposals all bunched together somewhere down the docks instead of ending up with having the low rise historic bits of the city compromised by “landmark” towers.

      Fully agreed with you jimg – Frankfurt in particular looks fantastic. What you quoted above referred to the fact that we’re never going to get such a cluster in Dublin, not in the medium term anyway, so the best we can hope for is a number of ‘landmark’ towers sited relatively coherently and as closely together as possible in the Docklands, preferably standing guard close to the river, in and around the Grand Canal Dock area.
      My advocating of such buildings must certainly did not refer to a scattergun approach across the city! – alas precisely what we seem to be getting 🙁

    • #750161
      jdivision
      Participant

      Anybody else wondering whether the awarding of the U2 tower construction project is already a done deal? Just think about what was due to be built next to it and how that is no longer mentioned even though it has planning permission.

    • #750162
      kite
      Participant

      @jdivision wrote:

      Anybody else wondering whether the awarding of the U2 tower construction project is already a done deal? Just think about what was due to be built next to it and how that is no longer mentioned even though it has planning permission.

      😉 Planning in Ireland eh? Money talks.:D…or walks,,to Holland.

    • #750163
      Keen
      Participant

      the U2 tower seems to be getting some unsettling press around the world – saw a few articles online about locals, and some people go as far to say ‘dubliners’ who are odjecting tower. I think it’s mad to say that a tiny group of residents objecting the tower get more press than the tower itself. I guess the only newsworthy stories are bad news. Also the fact that there is such a long-windeda debate over a 100m tower is laughable. Many cities build them unnoticed and get on with it.
      Anyway i wonder if they will still build the studio on top since U2 are moving to Holland? And will they still call it the U2 tower?
      We have been talking about this tower since 2002 and now it will not commence until 2008? It is only worth waiting that long for the Shanghai World Financial Centre which has taken 10 years to get off the ground…and that is almost 500M tall!!!
      I dont see why there should be such a the delay between the tender deadline in October 2006 and commencing construction in 2008? 2 years? I am convinced it will be under way before then…unless they cancel the whole thing…ha ha ha

    • #750164
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      U2 aren’t moving to Holland, just their finances. Therefore you will see them heli-coptering on top of their tower as planned, in 2009.

    • #750165
      Keen
      Participant

      @The Denouncer wrote:

      U2 aren’t moving to Holland, just their finances. Therefore you will see them heli-coptering on top of their tower as planned, in 2009.

      Is there a helipad in the design now? i thought they had a ‘dedicated’ lift?

    • #750166
      kite
      Participant

      @The Denouncer wrote:

      U2 aren’t moving to Holland, just their finances. Therefore you will see them heli-coptering on top of their tower as planned, in 2009.

      😉
      The foresight of U2 eh!
      Do you think when they were recording in Windmill Lane Studios all those years ago they knew the tax breaks would come to an end?…Windmills,,Holland!!:rolleyes:

    • #750167
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Is U2 actually going to own this building or are they only renting the top few floors :confused:

    • #750168
      Keen
      Participant

      i seen one article in an Aussie paper claiming that U2 were building the tower as if they were financing it or worse can you imagine Bono and the boys out doing a bit of bricklaying? 😀

    • #750169
      Cathal Dunne
      Participant

      When is the U2 Tower going to be finished? I heard that it would be opened in 2008 on one site and on another it said 2010, what’s the exact date?

    • #750170
      paul h
      Participant

      Hopefully some movement on this; (i,ve taken the liberty to highlight the biggest ‘what the f…’ moment of the article)

      U2 Tower rises as it goes to planning
      Edel Morgan

      The long awaited planning application for the U2 Tower on Dublin’s south Docklands has been lodged with the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) – and outlines plans for a tower that is substantially higher than expected at 130 metres, 10 metres higher than the Spire.

      According to the DDDA’s Director of Architecture, John McLaughlin, the 30-storey twisting tower at the end of Sir John Rogerson’s Quay will be mostly apartments – up to 100 metres – but will be crowned by a recording studio for U2 in a penthouse and a pinnacle that will give it a total height of 130 metres above street level.

      The DDDA can fast track the application so it will not be held up by a public appeals process.

      The anticipated completion date is 2008/2009. When it is built Bono and the boys will be able to take a dedicated lift down to the café and terrace at its base after a hard session in their recording studio.
      Whether they will have first dibs on any of its 182 one, two and three-bed apartments remains to be seen. The apartments will have “stunning views of the bay and back out towards the mountain”, says McLaughlin, as well as a high degree of glazing, generous floor sizes and high specifications across the board.

      One estate agent reckons that two-bedroom units will be €1 million to €1.5 million “depending on how high up you go and whether it has a view of the sea. As it twists, the views will differ.”

      McLaughlin describes the building, designed by Burdon Craig Dunne Henry (BCDH), as having a sculptural quality. “Like a Brancusi sculpture, it looks different when you look at it from different angles.”

      It will twist gradually as it rises, “with the last floor rotated 45 degrees in relation to the first floor and the tower will have a width of 26m”. While construction costs of €55 million to €100 million are being bandied about, McLaughlin says it is impossible to estimate.

      “We don’t yet have a building this tall and the tallest building in Dublin so far was built 30 years ago. It’s quite a new construction type. Most builders are used to building six to eight storeys but this is something new.” The DDDA has advertised for a development team with experience in delivering high-rise towers and it is believed that all the major developers such as Liam Carroll of Zoe and Treasury Holdings will compete for the job. Pre-selection for a development partner should take place by the end of the year.

      © The Irish Times

    • #750171
      Cathal Dunne
      Participant

      First they lodge a plan for a 60 metre tower and then the DDDA say they’ll raise it to 100 metres. And now second they put in the planning application and they want 130 metres:eek: Nothing against them doing it really, I think there’ll be little if any extra impact with the 30 metres but it really sounds like this is turning into the ‘Incredible Expanding U2 Tower’

    • #750172
      malec
      Participant

      I say go for it. In my view a building becomes a skyscraper at around 150m. What I mean by that is a building really starts to be impressive due to height at this point, below this tall buildings are just “highrise”. 🙂
      Of course it depends on the design but I don’t think it depends a lot on context. For example when I walk by the county hall I’m always impressed with how much the renovation improved it but am never impressed by the height, even though it’s the tallest in Ireland

    • #750173
      Keen
      Participant

      It sounds like the building it sticking to 100M at the ‘shoulder’ but the 10m will be added to the rooftop feature which is a substantial part of the overall building. I think it would look great though, and make it a real icon for the city centre especially if it was lit up and a lot of detail was put into the roof feature. And more importantly it now surpasses Hueston gate’s height of 123.55M!

    • #750174
      kite
      Participant

      @Cathal Dunne wrote:

      First they lodge a plan for a 60 metre tower and then the DDDA say they’ll raise it to 100 metres. And now second they put in the planning application and they want 130 metres:eek: Nothing against them doing it really, I think there’ll be little if any extra impact with the 30 metres but it really sounds like this is turning into the ‘Incredible Expanding U2 Tower’

      😮 Does anybody feel that a landmark building such as the U2 tower should be planned in conjunction with the City Council from the drawing board on, rather than adding a bit here, a bit there to gain height for heights sake?
      I’m all for a statement building BUT the way this project is going seems to be some sort of penile or height substitute, sorry Bono!!:eek:

    • #750175
      jdivision
      Participant

      The announcement on the preferred tenderer will be made later today, I’d be shocked if it’s not Liam Carroll

      EDIT: Sorry I think I got mixed up with the NCC preferred tenderers

      Dermod Dwyer, Chairman/CEO of SDICC stated: “On behalf of the whole SDICC team, I am pleased to welcome the Minister, The NCC Steering Committee and our respective teams to Spencer Dock and to acknowledge the pro-active role all have played to bring the Public Private Partnership (PPP) tender successfully to this penultimate point in the process. It is a real recognition for Kevin Roche, the architect, the NEC group as designated managers, CMP/Sisk the building contractors, the extensive Irish and international professional team, and the other major stakeholders particularly the promoters Spencer Dock Development Company (SDDC) – led by Treasury Holdings, all of whom have demonstrated a strong commitment and belief in this project over many years.”

      He continued “This is a unique PPP project which requires the successful Tenderer both to provide the site, and to design, build, finance and operate Irelands National Conference Centre for 25 years. The finished iconic NCC building would be where Ireland and Dublin host the world for conferences, meetings, exhibitions and related events. Its proposed central location and high specification would undoubtedly put Dublin in a strong position to attract and compete for international conferences. The SDICC management team, in co-operation with the major sector stakeholders, are now ready and willing to get on with this important business. Already firm enquiries have been received in respect of a number of large international meetings including the world congress for a large professional body.”

    • #750176
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      JDivision

      Did you say you had news about the Spencer Dock development ?

    • #750177
      jdivision
      Participant

      @Rusty Cogs wrote:

      JDivision

      Did you say you had news about the Spencer Dock development ?

      Not huge but they are conducting a tall buildings survey in the north Lotts area and it is likely to result in significantly higher buildings being allowed in certain areas, Spencer Dock is expected to be one of the areas to benefit.

    • #750178
      aj
      Participant

      @jdivision wrote:

      Not huge but they are conducting a tall buildings survey in the north Lotts area and it is likely to result in significantly higher buildings being allowed in certain areas, Spencer Dock is expected to be one of the areas to benefit.

      i think they realise the bollocks that has been made of the rest of the docklands..to little to late?

    • #750179
      Morlan
      Participant

      I believe there is a crane being erected right in the middle of the site. Can anyone confirm?

    • #750180
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      There’s currently about five cranes on site, all dealing with the construction of the PWC offices (fronting on to the Liffey) and the apartments behind. The site of the National Conference centre is currently being used as a storage area for building materials.

    • #750181
      alonso
      Participant

      apparently it’s a “building with a shoulder parapet at 100 metres above street level crowned with a new recording studio for U2 in a penthouse to a final height of 130 metres above street level” so 130 metres then?

      It’s a pity it’s a section 25 application. Had it been a normal one, someone could have appealed and asked for an oral hearing. And given Boo’s penchant for attending these types of events, we coulda gone and looked on in awe/heckled/got an autograph/thrown fruit… whatever floats yer boat

    • #750182
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      Are U2 going to need a studio in three/four years time. Surely the African Queen will be out of bombastic stadium dross by then. Then again, look at the Stones (or Status Quo) !

    • #750183
      darkman
      Participant

      At 26m’s wide this buildng will look like a match stick. The dimensions dont seem to fit. How are they going to twist it with such a narrow width and within 130m’s by 45 degree’s? I dont believe thats even practical. Expect larger and taller structure IMHO higher then 150m’s. Could an architect comment on this?:rolleyes:

    • #750184
      malec
      Participant

      ^^ That’s only a 5 to 1 ratio, nothing compared to some being built around the world at 10 to 1 height to width ratio or more. The fordham spire in chicago goes through a 360 degree twist and is around 500m tall. That gives 90 degrees every 125m

    • #750185
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      yep, its a similar footprint to trump tower, ny, which rises to 270m or so.

      Off Topic – the highest slenderness ratio i have come across is 11:1 for trump tower,… i’ve read that 12:1 is considered the upper limit for buildings (that was in a book published 15yrs ago). Has anyone come across any higher slenderess ratios? How high can we go, would say a 15:1 ratio be possible?

    • #750186
      malec
      Participant

      I think it depends on the building. Obviously the more populated your building is the more elevators you need and the thicker your tower has to be. Super-luxury residentials could probably go really high since there’ll never be a large amount of people inside.

      The highcliff in hong kong is also a really thin one:

      Another tower I came across, is to be built in dubai I think and is about 400m. I think this is around the limit.

    • #750187
      Cathal Dunne
      Participant

      @malec wrote:

      That thing looks amazing, Imagine if THAT was the U2 Tower…*sigh*… if only.

    • #750188
      NeilA
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      I believe there is a crane being erected right in the middle of the site. Can anyone confirm?

      There seems to be a crane (albeit not a very tall one) right on the footprint of where the tower will go – think its only gone up in the last week so….

    • #750189
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      @NeilA wrote:

      There seems to be a crane (albeit not a very tall one) right on the footprint of where the tower will go – think its only gone up in the last week so….

      I was down there yesterday and can confirm it’s still one big hole in the ground.

    • #750190
      Morlan
      Participant

      Was down there a few days ago. There is a lot of activity on the site. Pipe laying and pile-driving.

    • #750191
      Frankie Boy
      Participant

      Looks promising … I hope to get down there on Monday so I will have chat with the builders to see whats going on.

    • #750192
      NeilA
      Participant

      Re: pic above
      Is its just me or does that look like some form of concrete foundation that has been laid over in the far left corner…. and i think this is exactly where the tower will go ? :confused:
      I’m purely an interested layman so i’m curious as to what that could be….

    • #750193
      skenn_ie
      Participant

      I say NOOOOOOOOOO to a bigger tower. It would look far too bulky. If the bottom few floors flared out a little, that would prabably be ok. Something other than a cube beside it would be good too, maybe something like the wireframe sketch.

    • #750194
      Morlan
      Participant

      @skenn_ie wrote:

      I say NOOOOOOOOOO to a bigger tower. It would look far too bulky. If the bottom few floors flared out a little, that would prabably be ok. Something other than a cube beside it would be good too, maybe something like the wireframe sketch.

      I agree. Anything above 4 floors is just idiotic for this area. It’s far too close to the city centre.

      A nice 3 story block would be perfect for this site. Although, I think 3 sotries would be a bit overkill for the whole area.

    • #750195
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      I read on the AJPlus website that the designs for U2 tower may be scrapped, and that a couple of british architects (one being Foster) are working on a new scheme. Can anybody shed some more light on this? Is it alright to quote the full aj article here?

      http://www.ajplus.co.uk/news/news_article/?aid=57978&sid=49

    • #750196
      Cathal Dunne
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      I agree. Anything above 4 floors is just idiotic for this area. It’s far too close to the city centre.

      A nice 3 story block would be perfect for this site. Although, I think 3 sotries would be a bit overkill for the whole area.

      😮 Are you serious? The whole Docklands is full of unremarkable blocks of only a couple of stories, we desperately need something tall and something with a bit of ‘wow’ factor.

      There’s nothing else there as the area was a wasteland before the revamp began. Its a blank canvas so should be built up to a great height as much as possible.

    • #750197
      darkman
      Participant

      @cokedrinker wrote:

      I read on the AJPlus website that the designs for U2 tower may be scrapped, and that a couple of british architects (one being Foster) are working on a new scheme. Can anybody shed some more light on this? Is it alright to quote the full aj article here?

      http://www.ajplus.co.uk/news/news_article/?aid=57978&sid=49

      TBH I always thought the twisting design would not look right at just 130m. I think it would need to be taller. I do hope that article is wrong though because we dont want any more delays with this really.

    • #750198
      publicrealm
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      I agree. Anything above 4 floors is just idiotic for this area. It’s far too close to the city centre.

      A nice 3 story block would be perfect for this site. Although, I think 3 sotries would be a bit overkill for the whole area.

      I’m not so sure. 3 storey might be fine for that particular site but what signal would it send out?

      Thin end of the wedge stuff really – next thing you know and it is being cited as precedent for all sorts of high falutin high rise.

      Surely we have learned from the excessive heights along the quays?

    • #750199
      paul h
      Participant

      Yes good point
      There should be a blanket ban on any structure over 3 floors – effective immediately
      This isn’t new york or tokyo or barcelona or sydney or melbourne or rio or london or most city
      in the rest of the civized world.
      This is Dublin and we dont do – so called ‘sustainable development’
      It is every citizens right, in this great country, to be entitled to a front and back garden with a large park minutes away
      Let the next generation worry about sustainability
      Just like the global warming crisis

    • #750200
      jdivision
      Participant

      Shortlist for the site:
      Ballymore Properties
      Royal BAM Group
      Treasury Holdings/Sisk
      Mountbrook Homes
      River II Partnership
      In order to achieve a compliant tender, developers are required to bid for the current U2 Tower design and their architect’s design for the Britain Quay site.

    • #750201
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      SHORTLIST FOR U2 TOWER AND BRITAIN QUAY DEVELOPMENT CONFIRMED

      DOCKLANDS AUTHORITY CONFIRMS SHORTLIST FOR U2 TOWER AND BRITAIN QUAY DEVELOPMENT

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority has selected a shortlist ofdevelopers to proceed to the second stage of the tender process to design, construct and finance the U2 Tower and the Britain Quay Development. Since the original design competition, the Docklands Authority has assembled an adjacent, substantial site on Britain Quay which has been included in this tender. The site is located at the confluence of three waterways, the River Liffey, River Dodder and Grand Canal, one of the most unique sites in the city.

      Tenderers are invited to submit designproposals for this site and to provide an integrated solution with the U2 Tower. This is one of the most significant architectural projects to be delivered in the regeneration of the Docklands area. Paul Maloney, CEO of the Docklands Authority, welcoming the proposals, said, “we are delighted withthe calibre of teams engaged and to see the involvement of eminent architects including Foster & Partners, Rafael Vinoly and other internationally recognised architects.

      We are confident that the consortia selected will deliver an enduring architectural landmark which will be acknowledged in Ireland and around the world.”Shortlisted developers have put together consortia with world classexperience in tower building including:

      Ballymore Properties
      Royal BAM Group
      Treasury Holdings/Sisk
      Mountbrook Homes
      River II Partnership

      In order to achieve a compliant tender, developers are required to bid forthe current U2 Tower design and their architect’s design for the BritainQuay site.

      The U2 Tower is located in the Grand Canal Dock area, where the DocklandsAuthority are working with some of the world’s leading architects onprojects such as the Studio Libeskind-designed Grand Canal Theatre, the Manuel Aires Mateus designed five star hotel, and Martha Schwartz designed Grand Canal Square.

    • #750202
      jdivision
      Participant

      Who did they acquire the Britain Quay site off and does anybody know who’s involved in the River II partnership

      EDIT: site was acquired years ago by DDDA and while it is not commenting on who’s involved in River II partnership The Sunday Times has said that Paddy McKillen is involved in it

    • #750203
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Article here by Deyan Sudjic from the website Paul posted relating to the Van Allen Institute’s Gateway Park Competition which might be of interest in relation to the U2 tower architectural competition:

      http://www.vanalen.org/gateway/why_politicsofdesign.php

      It is in Pdf format towards the bottom of the page and entitled ‘Design Competitions: The Pitfalls and the Potential.’

    • #750204
      Cathal Dunne
      Participant

      If there’s such a comnflict over the design of this building, than what exactly are those builders doing down there?:confused:

      Are they just pile-driving for the fun of it while the DCC mandarins wrangle and prevaricate?

      It must be the biggest playground in the State then if the current(if there’s any) design has been thrown out and is being redrafted.

      I may be a simpleton, but building something without a firm idea or plan of what that thing is, strikes me as insane.

    • #750205
      darkman
      Participant

      This whole project (U2 tower) is at serious risk now not just because of architectural deficencies (which are denied by DDDA in the Irish Times today) but because the housing boom is over. Thats the biggest threat to this tower tbh.

    • #750206
      Morlan
      Participant

      I don’t believe that for a second. Prime location, a first for highrise-living in Ireland – they’re bound to sell out completly.

    • #750207
      Anonymous
      Participant

      You do have to wonder what is going on with this.

      A couple of points worth noting are: firstly DCC have nothing to do with this project. Secondly there is no evidence that the housing market is in any condition other than under-supplied in this segment. Thirdly this site has been delivering hold ups for 8 years now.

      I hope they get it right and that costs are not cut at the 11th hour and that the end result is the poitive model that this project has often threathened to deliver.

    • #750208
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      @Cathal Dunne wrote:

      If there’s such a comnflict over the design of this building, than what exactly are those builders doing down there?:confused:

      Are they just pile-driving for the fun of it while the DCC mandarins wrangle and prevaricate?

      It must be the biggest playground in the State then if the current(if there’s any) design has been thrown out and is being redrafted.

      I may be a simpleton, but building something without a firm idea or plan of what that thing is, strikes me as insane.

      I went to have a look at this yesterday. It would appear from what I could see that there is at least one level of an underground services area complete, if not two (car parks etc).

    • #750209
      Maskhadov
      Participant

      @Cathal Dunne wrote:

      That thing looks amazing, Imagine if THAT was the U2 Tower…*sigh*… if only.

      couldnt agree more.. we could do with a few of these in the port area should it ever get re developed.

    • #750210
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      I took a walk down to this site yesterday and I’m not sure if the current building works have anything to do with the U2 Tower. I walked around behind the site and through a Travellers encampment and I think that they are residing on what will be the actual tower site. So unless I’m mistaken, the U2 tower site has had absolutely nothing done as of yet. :confused:

    • #750211
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Yeah my understandment of the site is that the encampment is the site not the area being excavated across the street.

    • #750212
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      Yep it is the encampment, im using the site to design my own skyscraper for my final year project… Was down checking it out around november and stalled when i came across the mobiles. Spotted a gap in the barriers and plucked up the courage to move in and take photos and video footage with my new k800i and a dvcam, when some wee lad runs out of a caravan asking wtf i was doing. I told him i was a student and i was just taking photos for my class when i noticed he had a bloody STANLEY in his hand lol. I was sure he was after my equipment but he was cool when he realised i was a student…we had a quick chat about U2 and the tower and i got to hell outta there.

      Anyway the site appears unbelievable narrow when you’re physically standing in the middle of it, I found it hard to imagine a 120m skyscraper going on it, and it looks like im going to be putting a 240m one on it.

    • #750213
      paul h
      Participant

      Any pics you could share cokedrinker??!!

    • #750214
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      Heres a couple taken within the site. Keep in mind the building line is 8m from the quay wall along the long end.

    • #750215
      mcdanish
      Participant

      Pretty sure thats not the site, is it not the site next door that is currently being readied?
      A lot of mystery regarding this development.Not much info in the public domain

    • #750216
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      Well the location of the tower is at Britain Quay which is pictured above. The current construction is going on with an entrance from Benson St. Maybe I’m wrong but it would seem strange to build the foundations, car parks of a huge site with out even the plans for the towers agreed upon, let alone tendered out ?

    • #750217
      Anonymous
      Participant

      Ok so if the U2 tower is going in on the smaller site, anyone any idea of what they’re planning for the much larger adjacent site ! ?

      The Britain Quay site isn’t quite as small as i thought …

    • #750218
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      @mcdanish wrote:

      Pretty sure thats not the site, is it not the site next door that is currently being readied?
      A lot of mystery regarding this development.Not much info in the public domain

      No that is the U2 site. The other site belonged to Dunloe for a time.

    • #750219
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      @Peter FitzPatrick wrote:

      The green box was the site for the Dunloe tower
      http://ireland.archiseek.com/news/2000/000008.htm
      I’ve no idea what’s happening there now

      Results for Dunloe:
      https://archiseek.com/search/search.php?template_demo=&site=&path=&result_page=search.php&query_string=dunloe&search.x=0&search.y=0

      The red site is the U2 site.
      Look at the competition entries if you’re not sure…
      http://ireland.archiseek.com/unbuilt_ireland/dublin/u2_tower/index.html

    • #750220
      shadow
      Participant

      It would seem sensible to join the two sites establish a new street and design two reasonable sites as opposed to the elephant and the ant.

    • #750221
      Anonymous
      Participant

      thanks for links Paul, thats definitely the site so…
      strange the level of activity on the adjoining site, must do some digging for more info… any members that know the story, please enlighten us !

    • #750222
      jdivision
      Participant

      As far as i know Liam Carroll following his acquisition of Dunloe sought and received planning permission for a 120 metre high tower next to the U2 tower.

    • #750223
      Anonymous
      Participant

      What is the validity period for S25 permissions?

    • #750224
      mcdanish
      Participant

      Ok so its a very small site.I would have thought that it would be at least cleared and cordoned off.I would be very surprised if the U2 Tower project gets up and running this year in its current state.

    • #750225
      jdivision
      Participant

      Can’t find the details of the application but some detail buried in here
      http://archives.tcm.ie/businesspost/2005/11/13/story9502.asp

    • #750226
      Morlan
      Participant

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) has been accused of being “breathtaking in its arrogance” by assuming that its plans for the U2 tower in the docklands should take precedence over a higher tower planned by developer Liam Carroll, which already has planning permission.

      That’s the first I’ve ever heard of a second tower, with PP. Anyone any more details?

    • #750227
      jdivision
      Participant

      Was stated by Fay in the letter, been trying to find out more details myself

    • #750228
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      Peter Fitz, yep, it doesn’t look so small now when i look at it… however back then i was going along with the original site boundaries, in which the northern boundary of the site was in line with the northern boundary of the adjacent site, it felt really tiny, especially when i imagined the building line 8m from the eastern quay wall. This site is actually a comparable size to trump tower nyc, high cliff hong kong…which surprised me alot.

      OK, Heres part of a cad map i picked up from DDDA about 3 months ago… It shows the U2 tower in its NEW position, right up against the north quay wall… with the proposed road/bridge dividing the site. It also shows footprints for buildings on the large adjacent site which I have no knowledge of (i didnt take time to research this development as ill make my own proposals here too… I did however at one early stage believe there was to be some sort of tower somewhere on this site??pretty sure i came across images of it here?)

    • #750229
      Anonymous
      Participant

      @cokedrinker wrote:

      Peter Fitz, yep, it doesn’t look so small now when i look at it… however back then i was going along with the original site boundaries, in which the northern boundary of the site was in line with the northern boundary of the adjacent site, it felt really tiny, especially when i imagined the building line 8m from the eastern quay wall. This site is actually a comparable size to trump tower nyc, high cliff hong kong…which surprised me alot.

      OK, Heres part of a cad map i picked up from DDDA about 3 months ago… It shows the U2 tower in its NEW position, right up against the north quay wall… with the proposed road/bridge dividing the site. It also shows footprints for buildings on the large adjacent site which I have no knowledge of (i didnt take time to research this development as ill make my own proposals here too… I did however at one early stage believe there was to be some sort of tower somewhere on this site??pretty sure i came across images of it here?)

      It is actually Britan Quay with a sliver of John Rodge to the north.

      I remember the SBP piece at the time and I like everyone else am in the dark on the status of the Liam Carroll permission. My take on this is that the site is suitable for a tall building but that the Dunloe permission is now dated. Therefore LC should go back for a new permission which should be judged on quality and its legibility in relation to the proposed U2 tower.

    • #750230
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      @shadow wrote:

      It would seem sensible to join the two sites establish a new street and design two reasonable sites as opposed to the elephant and the ant.

      Don’t think i’d agree… I think the U2 site is one of the more attractive sites i’ve come across… nice, long, slender geometry. Its almost begging to stretch across and form the pedestrian connection to the Point Village!! 😉 (On the DDDA map i have, there is proposed, a 16m wide pedestrian only street of the PV – which begins directly across the river from the u2 tower, and runs to Sheriff street at the north. The LUAS stop will be midway up this new street. You can make out where the street would start on Peter Fitzs image above… directly to the right of the 4 pitched roof building)

      Anyway, does nobody at all know the nature of the buildings on the larger site??? Heading home for a few days and i may take a trip to the big city itself. Do you think the builders on site would be willing to divulge any information about the grand plan for the area?

    • #750231
      Anonymous
      Participant

      The easiest way to find out what the plans are would be to contact the DDDA planners and ask. If they have no record of a permission it would be reasonable to assume that the 1999 permission is a 10 year grant and that the owners are putting in foundations in accordance with that permission to ‘substantially complete’ the development prior to the 2009 expiry of that grant. If this is the case I would hope that a second application is made as that permission is dated at this stage and the location of the tower may affect the sight lines of the U2 tower from the city centre. A new design may compliment the U2 tower and less impressive point village watchtower. An attractive cluster would be a great addition to the City conversely a jumble would be a really wasted opportunity.

    • #750232
      darkman
      Participant

      Hope that DE tower goes ahead.

    • #750233
      shed
      Participant

      Hey im new to this forum but im quite interested in all the recent developements in the docklands and im very curious into why no work has started on this U2 tower yet
      Surely the plan of the U2 tower and the watchtower by the point as a gateway will be spoilt if this also goes ahead

      http://www.oms.ie/

      or has this been scrapped?

      It all seems like a bit of a mess-as if they forgot about this proposal above when planning the U2 tower or something!
      Anyone shed some light because im very confused with this situation
      Cheers

    • #750234
      jdivision
      Participant

      Read the thread, there’s a competition underway to select a developer. Then it’ll be built.

    • #750235
      mcdanish
      Participant

      The development proposed in Sir John Rogersons Quay is an impressive structure.It may block the view of the U2 tower looking down river but the U2 Tower will be built by the waterrs edge and will be 40 metres higher so should be pretty dominant still.

    • #750236
      darkman
      Participant

      There is no suggestion though that the 80m DE tower is even going ahead. Is there? That was proposed years ago.

    • #750237
      shed
      Participant

      just seen according to the sky scraper news page DE was cancelled..wonder why? is it common for developers to go through the expenses of employing architects to draw up plans and do detailed renders and recieve permission and then not go through with it? I assume it adds value to a site ect

    • #750238
      jdivision
      Participant

      @shed wrote:

      just seen according to the sky scraper news page DE was cancelled..wonder why? is it common for developers to go through the expenses of employing architects to draw up plans and do detailed renders and recieve permission and then not go through with it? I assume it adds value to a site ect

      That’s not true. Construction on the substructure has begun and the proposed development is subject to a legal dispute.
      From The Sunday Times last month:
      THE property developer Liam Carroll is limbering up for a court battle with Dublin city council over the scuppering of his plans for a 100-metre skyscraper to rival the proposed U2 tower in Dublin’s docklands.

      The structure, twice the height of Liberty Hall, would be part of a huge proposed development at the old Hammond Lane Metalworks at Sir John Rogerson’s Quay, right next door to the proposed 130-metre U2 tower that local development authorities are promoting.

      A development plan for the area published by the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) only allows for one of the skyscrapers to be built.

      Carroll had been in talks with the authorities to build the U2 tower, but was not on the short list of tenders announced by the DDDA last month. His Burwood House Developments (Ireland) has now filed legal action against the council in a division of the High Court over the council’s refusal to extend five-year planning permission for his rival tower.

      Dunloe Ewart, the property company taken over by Carroll in 2002 after Noel Smyth, its chairman, was ousted, received permission from An Bord Pleanala for the Hammond Lane tower the same year, but it is yet to be built.

      Carroll applied to the council for an extension to the permission last year, but the council refused on the ground that substantial works had not commenced on the site. The developer is understood to be arguing that sufficient works have begun and has applied again for an extension to the planning permission. The council is currently considering the second application and a decision is expected within the next two weeks.

      The council is expected to contest Carroll’s legal action, however, if the matter reaches court in the meantime.

    • #750239
      mcdanish
      Participant

      This development would enhance the docks if it goes ahead.It would not take away from the U2 Tower as this acts as a get way coming up the river from Dublin port and the DE Tower is after it and is lower in height and further in from the rivers edge than the U2 Tower.
      Anyway at least Carroll is getting a move on unlike the DDDA regarding the forever proposed U2 tower.The width of the river at this point makes building more than one tower appropriate.The conservatism is frustrating from Dublin City Council.

    • #750240
      jdivision
      Participant

      From The Sunday Business Post yesterday:
      Carroll’s time extension plea refused

      Liam Carroll has been refused an extension of time for the development of a tower building and three other blocks next to the proposed U2 tower.

      Dublin City Council has ruled the limited nature of works which have been carried out at the former Hammond Lane metalworks site, compared to the overall scale of the development, mean the extension should be refused.

      It follows an earlier refusal, in November of last year, to grant an extension of time to complete the development.

      In anticipation of the refusal, Carroll lodged proceedings in early March in the commercial court, using a vehicle called Burwood House Developments (Ireland), challenging the council’s refusal to extend the five-year planning permission.

      Carroll has also had builders working on the site in recent months and is arguing sufficient works have been carried out in order for the extension of planning to be granted.

      If Carroll loses the case he is unlikely to be allowed to develop a tower on the site.

      Last year, the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) brought in an amended planning scheme for the Grand Canal Dock area that makes the siting of the landmark tower site specific, meaning the only allowable site is the adjoining one on which the U2 tower is to be built.

      ‘‘The requirements for such a tower would not be satisfied by any other landmark tower that may be permitted or constructed in the Grand Canal Dock area,” stated the draft amendment.

      Permission for the Carroll development was originally sought in 1999, when Dunloe Ewart was still controlled by Noel Smyth and was finally approved by An Bord Pleanala on February 7, 2002.

      That plan proposed the construction of almost 26,500 square metres of offices, 231 apartments, a leisure centre, creche, shops and restaurants.

      The scheme involved the construction of three blocks, ranging from five to seven storeys, and the tower block rising to just under 100 metres, which was to be 19 storeys with an additional mezzanine floor.

      There would also have been almost 450 car parking spaces.

      When the DDDA decided to invite applications to develop the U2 tower site, Carroll was regarded as favourite to be named as preferred developer of the 120-metre U2 tower site, but in a major surprise he wasn’t on the shortlist, which comprises Ballymore Properties, Royal BAM Group, a joint venture between Treasury Holdings and Sisk, Sean Dunne’s Mountbrook Homes and the River II Partnership.

      The shortlist of developers are now required to bid for the current U2 tower design and their own architect’s design for the Britain Quay site.

    • #750241
      Anonymous
      Participant

      That is a very well researched article with the last line being most telling of all ‘their own architects design’

    • #750242
      Morlan
      Participant

      Carroll’s Tower:

      Bit of a squeez..

      [

    • #750243
      alonso
      Participant

      there just has to be amenity issues in relation to proximity and shadowing there. What’s the distance between the towers?

    • #750244
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      It wouldn’t be much more than the width of the street I would imagine

    • #750245
      millennium
      Participant

      This debate sends an apalling message to anbody who is remotely interested in planning and development in Dublin.
      Here we have a situation where one Planning Authority (Dublin City Council) have refused permission for a development that they approved a number of years ago (lets call it the Carroll’s Tower for the sake of simplicity even though it predates Liam Carroll’s involvement in that company).
      The second Planning Authority (Dublin Docklands Develoment Authority) are trying to develop their own tower, by means of an international architectural competition and a subsequent developer’s competition(?). In between times they are attempting to increased the height of the Tower (let’s call it The Twisting Tower for the sake of simplicity).
      They are also attempting to persuade the first developer not to develop the Carroll Tower. Furthermore, they can proceed to build the Twisting Tower without recourse to third party appeals to An Bord Pleanala, but they will require the approval of the Minister of the Environment.
      The third planning authority, An Bord Pleanala, who approved the Carroll Tower a number of years ago on appeal can do so again but have no jurisdiction over the Twisting Tower!!
      Cowboys, Ted, a bunch of fecking cowboys!!
      😮

    • #750246
      jimg
      Participant

      I hate the idea of “landmark towers” – giving a monopoly on the right to build high to one particular building within an area. It reminds me of the restrictive laws which effectively prohibit someone opening a pharmacy within a certain distance of another.

      Either an area is suitable for tall buildings or it isn’t. As a proponent of tall buildings for Dublin in this forum, I would rather there be none rather than the odd outlandishly tall building dotted around the city scape. Buildings should have sympathy for their context; it seems obvious to me (but not to the city planners apparently) that scale and grain apply to height as well as width and bulk.

      Remember, today’s “landmark” will be tomorrow’s Evening Herald’s “most hated building in Dublin”. Look at Liberty Hall to see how fickle the public are in regard to conspicuously tall buildings. Liberty Hall is relatively graceful and “light” yet it seems to provoke venomous bile and demands for it’s instant destruction from it’s many detractors; many of whom seem to be the same characters on the forum who bemoan the lack of tall “new” buildings in Dublin. I wouldn’t advocate it for a minute at that particular location but if Liberty Hall were part of a cluster of similarly scaled buildings, then I believe it would be far more popular than it is.

      The current planning spat provoked by the appalling idea of, gasp, having two tall buildings near each other in here seems ludicrous to me. I’d much rather see a cluster of various tall buildings on the area bounded by John Rogerson’s Quay and the Grand Canal dock and allow the future generations judge the success or failure of the individual buildings. Picking disparate sites around a low rise city and deeming them suitable for a “landmark” is not the way to go for Dublin and smacks of unbelievable egotism and hubris on the part of the planners responsible.

    • #750247
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      Liamo is not having a good week of it. His office development accross the Liffey (half way down stream between Spencer Dock and the Point) has been refused for being to high/dense/uninspiring/OTT and this may give the anchor tennant, Anglo Irish Bank enough reason to run. Seemingly their staff were not thrilled about the move in the first place.

      An article in the Property section of todays IT explains it all better than I have.

    • #750248
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      Well look at that, I copy and pasted.

      Council blocks Anglo-Irish HQ

      Liam Carroll’s Danninger company is in danger of losing one of the largest ever office lettings in Dublin after being refused planning permission this week for a €300 million development on the former Brooks Thomas site on the North Wall Quay in the Dublin docklands. Danninger had already agreed to rent around 18,580sq m (200,000sq ft) to Anglo-Irish Bank after undercutting competing developers on the rent. The bank may now look elsewhere for a new HQ. A second letting of 9,290sq m (100,000sq ft) had been agreed with solicitors O’Donnell Sweeney.

      City planners objected to the plot ratio of 3.8 in the eight-storey block, saying that it was in excess of the indicative plot ratio of 2.5/3.0 set out in the current development plan. The planners also criticised the “excessive bulk and massing of the buildings” which could result in traffic congestion in the vicinity. They also said it would set an undesirable precedent. It described the proposed ground floor uses onto the proposed urban square and the Liffey quays as “poor” and said it would not create a vibrant public domain or act as a focal point.

    • #750249
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      Why do we keep hearing about the notion of a ‘gateway’? Has anyone here ever approached Dublin up the Liffey from the bay? This concept is about as valid as calling the U2-Point pair ‘two fingers to Europe’. Can we drop it, please?

      jimg- not that I’d advocate it in this area, but are you familiar with the idea of ‘Tradeable Development Rights’? In effect, a landlord sells his right to develop upwards to a neighbour, in perpetuity. It wouldn’t solve the isolated towers / monopoly problem, but it would at least see to it that the competitive aspect of the height game was removed, as any developer would have to buy the rights of others beforeproceeding, in effect compensating them for the loss of development potential, unlike the current method which is typically Dublin in its crudeness.

      Liam Carroll should just go ahead and build the damn thing and then apply for retention. DCC seems to be entirely lacking in the enforcement area, so he’d have little to worry about in the current climate.

      @Rusty Cogs wrote:

      It described the proposed ground floor uses onto the proposed urban square and the Liffey quays as “poor” and said it would not create a vibrant public domain or act as a focal point.

      Shame DCC couldn’t apply the same logic to Dame Street. :rolleyes:

    • #750250
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      As I don’t believe there is a thread dealing specifically with the DDDA I’ll post here.

      Their website has had it’s long awaited/overdue revamp.

      http://www.ddda.ie

      You can have a look at all the future projects and watch their deadlines fly by. Unsurprisingly they havn’t even bothered to guess when the U2 tower will be completed.

    • #750251
      tfarmer
      Participant

      ammm when are they actually going to build the u2 tower seems like they have been talking about it for years…

    • #750252
      SOC
      Participant

      Did anyone else see this in Monday’s Irish Times?

      The headline was “U2 bid to develop tower named after them” by Frank McDonald.

      It said:
      Rock band U2 are bidding to develop the tower that will carry their name on Britain Quay in Dublin’s Docklands, in partnership with Ballymore Properties, The Irish Times has learned.

      However, the Dublin docklands Development Authority, which owns this pivotally-located site, has assured the rival bidders that members of the band “will not have any role or involvement, directly or indirectly” in assessing bids for the project.

      After concerns were raised by other bidders about potential conflicts of interest, the authority’s lawyers, A&L Goodbody, wrote to them last week saying that “neither U2 nor its representatives have had any role” in setting ground rules for the contest.

      The solicitors’ letter said the docklands authority would “enforce a very strict policy on conflicts of interest” in assessing the four bids and that it wished to “remind bidderst hat any conflict of interest should…be disclosed to the authority”.

      To “underpin the independence” of the assessment process, the authority has appointed Chris Wilkinson of Wilkinson Eyre Architects: Amanda Levete, of Future Systems Architects: and Michael O’Doherty, former principal architect at the Office of Public Works, to advise it.

      Apart from Ballymore Properties/U2, the bidders are Mountbrook Homes, controlled by developer Sean Dunne; the Dutch-based Royal BAM Group; Treasury Holdings-Sisk; and the Riverside 2 Partnership, a consortium formed by the Kelly, McCormack, Flynn and Elliot families.

      It is understood that the Ballymore/U2 group has engaged international architects Foster and Partners to design its scheme, while New York-based Argentinian architect Rafael Vinoly is acting for the Riverside consortium. and Baghdad born Zaha Hadid for Treasury-Sisk.

      All of the bidders are required to submit “compliant bids” based on the 2003 competition-winning scheme for the U2 tower by Blackrock-based Burdon Dunne Craig Henry. However, they may also submit “variant bids”.

      As originally envisaged, the tower was to be 60 metres high. The docklands “strong architectural statement” said authority chief executive Paul Maloney.

      He stressed that U2’s involvement was strictly limited to two agreements with the authority – one covering “naming rights” and the other dealing with the provision of studios for the band at the top of the tower, to replace their former studios on Hanover Quay.

      Mr Maloney said the authority was “thrilled” to attract architects of the calibre of Wilkinson, who has won two Stirling prizes from the Royal Institute of British Architects, and Levete, who also won a Stirling prize, as well as O’Doherty to give an Irish perspective.

      The deadline for submitting bids for the project is June 18th

    • #750253
      Maskhadov
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      Carroll’s Tower:

      Those apartments beside the U2 tower are a joke.

    • #750254
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      GGGGOOOOOO ZAHA

      Can’t wait to see these new proposals, particularly zaha hadids… i didnt know she was working with one group of developers

    • #750255
      stira
      Participant

      those aparements are a joke, and as was posted, the area is either suitable for high rise or it isnt, this area could accomodate tens of thousands along with the glass bottle site etc if it were developed properly, obviously the land prices arent high enough if they can afford to put up those small blocks on the supposedly prestigious sites…

    • #750256
      Keen
      Participant
      SOC wrote:
      Did anyone else see this in Monday’s Irish Times?

      The headline was “U2 bid to develop tower named after them” by Frank McDonald.

      It said:
      Rock band U2 are bidding to develop the tower that will carry their name on Britain Quay in Dublin’s Docklands, in partnership with Ballymore Properties, The Irish Times has learned.

      However, the Dublin docklands Development Authority, which owns this pivotally-located site, has assured the rival bidders that members of the band “will not have any role or involvement, directly or indirectly” in assessing bids for the project.

      After concerns were raised by other bidders about potential conflicts of interest, the authority’s lawyers, A&L Goodbody, wrote to them last week saying that “neither U2 nor its representatives have had any role” in setting ground rules for the contest.

      The solicitors’ letter said the docklands authority would “enforce a very strict policy on conflicts of interest” in assessing the four bids and that it wished to “remind bidderst hat any conflict of interest should…be disclosed to the authority”.

      To “underpin the independence” of the assessment process, the authority has appointed Chris Wilkinson of Wilkinson Eyre Architects: Amanda Levete, of Future Systems Architects: and Michael O’Doherty, former principal architect at the Office of Public Works, to advise it.

      Apart from Ballymore Properties/U2, the bidders are Mountbrook Homes, controlled by developer Sean Dunne]

      Thanks for the news on this, nice to see the run up to the tower’s construction heating up

    • #750257
      tfarmer
      Participant

      Thanks for the news on this, nice to see the run up to the tower’s construction heating up

      Yeah maybe some day they’ll actually build it..

    • #750258
      SOC
      Participant

      Keen, you’re right. It really does seem to be gathering momentum! As my last quote was so well received… this one’s from last week’s Phoenix – the writing’s not great but the points it makes are interesting!

      The heading was “U2’s Building Blocks”

      It said:

      U2 fans must be wondering whteher they’ll ever see any of the various building projects that the lads have planned for Dublin, At present the rockers-cum-developers are involved with incredibily ambitious plans for two developments – one being a skyscraper by Ringsend docks, while the other will effectively quadruple the size of the Clarence Hotel – which involves gutting and demolishing a number of protected structures. Both of these projects are facing significant opposition.

      Down at the docks, the projected – and humbly titled – “U2 Tower” has more than doubled in height from the 60-metres originally permitted to the 2003 competition winner to 130 metres – ie ten metres taller that the Spire. Confusion has been the order of the day here and the scheme has come in for flak, with The Irish Times earlier this year asking “Does the U2 Tower stack up”, citing that the UK-based Architects’ Journal had “reported that the BDCH design had been binned”.

      But who are BDCH anyway? It emerged that the firm was deemed the winner of the design competition when the name of the original winner was mislaid and Burdon Dunne Architects and Craig Henry Architects (BDCH) got the nod. One of the principles here, Felim Dunne, is a brother-in-law of U2’s manager, Paul McGuinness. In the intervening years the project went on the back burner but in February this year a press release was issued announcing the firms shortlisted to develop the tower, with Paul Maloney, ceo of the Dublin Development Docklands Authority (DDDA), stating, “We are delighted with the calibre of teams engaged and to see the involvment of eminent architects including Foster & Partners, Rafael Vinoly and other internationally recognisged architects.”

      The identity of the “other internationally recognised architects” is unclear and there’s now no specific mention of Felim Dunne or BDCH, but Paul McGuiness is once again involved, and one of the developers on the shortlist – Sean Murray’s Ballymore Properties – has teamed up with, er, U2. Four years on from the original competition, and not a block has been laid but Goldhawk is aware that a complaint has been sent to the European Commission by ‘The Environment Group for Ringsend Irishtown Sandymount’ attacking the entire manner in which planning has been going on in the DDDA area.

      Meanwhile, progress is also very slow at the Clarence Hotel where Bono, the Edge, Derek Quinlan and Paddy McKillen have joined up forces in proposing a massive redevelopment – designed by Norman Foster – that would almost double the height of many of the existing buildings. Predictably, this has attracted a raft of criticisms – with nine objections filed formt he likes of Conor Martin (who owns neighbouring Bad Bobs), The Georgian Society, An Taisce, and also one from it’s former chairman, Michael Smith, whose house faces the Clarence across the Liffey.

      A crucial issue here is that the Planning Act requires “exceptional circumstances” in order for substantial alterations to be allowed to listed buildings. Hence, a recent request for additional information by Dublin City Council, in which the planners have asked about the hitherto unconsidered option of refurbishment rather than complete redevelopment. This is not a request Bono et al will have welcomed.

    • #750259
      SOC
      Participant

      Those close to the developer comp. say that two of the bidders are proposing BDCH design only! These two, at least, will be watching the assessment process like hawks!

    • #750260
      Mick
      Participant

      I don’t know if that’ll help SOC. Apparently Paul Maloney is very close to Ballymore…

    • #750261
      SOC
      Participant

      I just passed the DDDA offices on John Rogersons Quay and saw a beautiful model of the new U2 tower in their lobby. It looks fantastic!

    • #750262
      shanekeane
      Participant

      what is the problem with skyscrapers casting shadows? (not that the U2 tower is actually a skyscraper!) compare frankfurt, which is absolutely deadened and made boring by the distance between skyscrapers and empty plazas between them, and new york, which is made utterly fascinating by the proximity of its tall buildings. some parts of wall st. and around grand central station never see the light of day, and yet are absolutely captivating, adding enormously to the energy of the areas.

    • #750263
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      @shanekeane wrote:

      what is the problem with skyscrapers casting shadows? (not that the U2 tower is actually a skyscraper!) compare frankfurt, which is absolutely deadened and made boring by the distance between skyscrapers and empty plazas between them, and new york, which is made utterly fascinating by the proximity of its tall buildings. some parts of wall st. and around grand central station never see the light of day, and yet are absolutely captivating, adding enormously to the energy of the areas.

      I agree, the issue of tall buildings’ shadows is blow out of all proportion, Its not the end of the world to be in a bit of shade, especially in a city. Dublin is usually lit with ambient light from cloud cover anyway. 10/20+ storey buildings should be clustered in districts around the edge of the city centre as in other European cities (which I think is happening… gradually).

      Building restrictions should be enforced to a degree in the historical core of the city, regarding any inappropriate building, not just tall ones. But we need a LOT more high density in Dublin generally, otherwise the low-density urban sprawl will get out of hand.

    • #750264
      Mick
      Participant

      @SOC wrote:

      I just passed the DDDA offices on John Rogersons Quay and saw a beautiful model of the new U2 tower in their lobby. It looks fantastic!

      I saw a presentation of the new U2 Tower a few weeks ago including photographs of that model and the new CGIs. I agree, really fantastic!

      I’m not sure what all the secrecy is about, all the new information was to have been published in the Irish Architect this month but the publication was stopped by DDDA. I assume they don’t want anyone to see the new design in case they decide to change architect…

      The four bidders presented their proposals last week, two of the bidders opting for the new design and two opting for designs by either Norman Foster or Zaha Hadid. No obvious winner has emerged although Paul Maloney is supporting Ballymore/U2/Foster, so that’s the one to watch. Decision to be announced sometime after Thursday next.

    • #750265
      Morlan
      Participant

      “How. much. is. that. U2 model. in the window?”

      I went into the DDDA office today to take some photos of the U2 tower but the secretary said the model had been moved to a different room.

      They didn’t let me go into the meeting room where all the other GCD models were, so I went around the side of the building and took some photos through the window.

      I returned 20 minutes later and low and behold, there was the U2 model! Someone must have put it back after I enquired about it.

      Anyway, here’s some pics. Excuse the reflections on the glass, there wasn’t much I could do about it.

      And here’s two pics of the GDC model:

    • #750266
      alonso
      Participant

      great stuff. What;s that leaning tower that appears to be straddling the DART to the right of the gasometer?
      sorry ex-gasometer

    • #750267
      Morlan
      Participant
      alonso wrote:
      great stuff. What]

      That’s the old Montevetro design – Looks like somebody damaged the model set when moving it.

      This is what’s going ahead:

      [/IMG]

      This was a proposal:

      Again, DDDA picked the most bland design.

    • #750268
      alonso
      Participant

      Cheers. Yeh it had me confused. I like the last proposal best but christ you can’t have something like that! Poeple might actually form opinions on it rather than trundle past it on the DART without as much as a shrug.

    • #750269
      GregF
      Participant

      Well done to the DDDA again, their choice is awalys spot for always opting for the insignificant dud. Bless them for they have to be the most boring people to be around. Grey suits, cups of tea and early nights! Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
      What a magnificent pile of shite they have assembled in the Dublin Docks, and as the years go by it doesn’t get any better. Billions of euros worth, that looks fuck all. My foreign relatives and friends laugh at the assemblage of lego blocks for they can’t understand why it is all soooooooooo conservative. Poor fool who believes in the shite and buys an appartment here. Who wants to live in squat block land and pay half a million for an appartment cell?

    • #750270
      Mick
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      “How. much. is. that. U2 model. in the window?”

      I went into the DDDA office today to take some photos of the U2 tower but the secretary said the model had been moved to a different room.

      They didn’t let me go into the meeting room where all the other GCD models were, so I went around the side of the building and took some photos through the window.

      I returned 20 minutes later and low and behold, there was the U2 model! Someone must have put it back after I enquired about it.

      Anyway, here’s some pics. Excuse the reflections on the glass, there wasn’t much I could do about it.

      And here’s two pics of the GDC model:

      What a shower of hooligans! They’ve smashed up the U2 Tower model.

      It looked really great when I saw it last, the glass cladding rose to a point enclosing a beautiful rooftop garden with trees and terraces. It looks like when Paul Maloney said he was going to f**k the U2 Tower design into the bin he really meant it!

      I wonder what this cock-up is costing the taxpayer?

    • #750271
      darkman
      Participant

      Article in todays Sunday Times about the tower and saying how its become a complete farce. Also insinuating that U2 may be influencing whats going on with the tower:mad: What the hell does it have to do with them anyway?:mad: 😡 Original design likely to be dropped. Its thought U2 want a ‘star’ architect to win the tender at the expense of the original twisting design.

    • #750272
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      Article in todays Sunday Times about the tower and saying how its become a complete farce. Also insinuating that U2 may be influencing whats going on with the tower:mad: What the hell does it have to do with them anyway?:mad: 😡 Original design likely to be dropped. Its thought U2 want a ‘star’ architect to win the tender at the expense of the original twisting design.

      Its well known that some U2 members know Gehry personally. They met with him prior to original compitition. Frankly i’m getting sick of the whole process. The model in the above photos is spot on.

    • #750273
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      Can somebody with knowledge of building structure please comment on this please –

      The images of the model above, show what seems to be structural columns which are twisting in the same direction at the perimeter of the building. My take on it (as a student), is that these twisting columns are connected to the structural core within each floor level by steel beams , and that this is the primary structure of the building : twisting columns, beams and core. The twisting columns would also support the glazed facade. Does this sound right? or is there something else going on.

      Im asking because i have a similar structural solution with my design project (columns which twist in the same direction)… earlier in the year one of my tutors told me i would need columns running in the opposite direction also, to counteract the forces or whatever.

    • #750274
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      @cokedrinker wrote:

      Can somebody with knowledge of building structure please comment on this please –

      The images of the model above, show what seems to be structural columns which are twisting in the same direction at the perimeter of the building. My take on it (as a student), is that these twisting columns are connected to the structural core within each floor level by steel beams , and that this is the primary structure of the building : twisting columns, beams and core. The twisting columns would also support the glazed facade. Does this sound right? or is there something else going on.

      Im asking because i have a similar structural solution with my design project (columns which twist in the same direction)… earlier in the year one of my tutors told me i would need columns running in the opposite direction also, to counteract the forces or whatever.

      I dont see why, considering how small the floor plates are, there would be a need to have a supporting structure in this location. Unless it is supporting the facade system which is possible, but I doubt its part of the primary structure. On the other hand, it might just be there to hold the model itself together, and will not feature on the finished building.

      Regarding your project with twisting colus and the tutors comments, I assume he was refering to a lattice type structure similar to that of Fosters Gerkhin in London?

    • #750275
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      yep he was referring to the double helix type structure of the Gherkin. Infinity tower in dubai is similar to the u2 tower only much taller. From what i’ve read, the primary structure of that tower is the structural core and the perimeter columns which all twist in the same direction

      Inifinity Tower

    • #750276
      SOC
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      Article in todays Sunday Times about the tower and saying how its become a complete farce. Also insinuating that U2 may be influencing whats going on with the tower:mad: What the hell does it have to do with them anyway?:mad: 😡 Original design likely to be dropped. Its thought U2 want a ‘star’ architect to win the tender at the expense of the original twisting design.

      Has anyone got a copy of that article please?

    • #750277
      shed
      Participant

      Not sure if anyone has seen this artical before but its quite interesting, although, it still sheds no light on when construction will begin

      http://www.ddda.ie/index.jsp?1nID=93&2nID=97&pID=327&nID=328

    • #750278
      jdivision
      Participant

      Who designed the Infinity Tower?
      *edit* just found out it’s the same ones who do most of Ballymore’s stuff in the London docklands.

    • #750279
      Mick
      Participant

      @SOC wrote:

      Has anyone got a copy of that article please?

      Critics brand Docklands development a farce as design untwists (by Colin Coyle, The Sunday Times, August 5, 2007)

      It is a story that already has as many twists as a Joshua tree. But the latest shift over plans for the landmark U2 tower in Dublin’s docklands isn’t a twist at all, it’s quite the reverse.

      The twisty design that won a competition for the site seems to have disappeared and left its critics to complain that the project has turned into a farce.

      In 2003 a panel of judges selected by the site owner, the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA), announced that a Dublin based firm had beaten competition from 541 other entrants to design the 60m tower on Britain Quay. The winning design of Burdon Craig Dunne Henry (BCDH), a twisting tower incorporating apartments and a recording studio for the eponymous band, generated plenty of excitement in architectural circles.

      However, it now appears it wasn’t what either the DDDA or U2, who co-sponsored the competition, were looking for.

      When the DDDA sought tenders to build the tower last year, bidders were told it had more than doubled in size to 130m, which would make it the tallest building in Ireland. An element of “new design” would be permitted as a result.

      Now it has emerged that two of the five designs on a short list to be announced in the next two months have dropped the competition-winning notion of a twisting block.

      One design is being promoted by U2, who have teamed up with Sir Norman Foster, the British architect, and Sean Mulryan, the property developer, to produce a design that is described as “radically different” from BCDH’s concept.

      The twisted tower has also been ignored in a plan submitted by Treasury-Sisk and designed by Zaha Hadid, the award-winning international architect. It is understood that the three other finalists have remained faithful to the original design.

      One of the former entrants, who asked not to be named, criticised the DDDA’s decision to allow proposals that ignored the original winning idea.

      “The first competition was a farce. But what’s happening now is effectively a new competition to ensure the result they want – a tower designed by an international star like Foster or Hadid”.

      This new controversy is a headache the DDDA could do without. The 2003 competition hit the headlines when the design originally chosen had to be scrapped because the architects could not be identified.

      To guard against conflicts of interest, the judging panel had been provided with numbers corresponding to projects, with entrants’ names withheld to ensure anonymity. But when the winner was picked, no number corresponding to its entry could be found. The organisers considered posting an image of their first choice on a website to track down its creators, but were advised this could result in a legal challenge.

      The DDDA has dismissed criticism of the new competition. It said all five short-listed candidates were given scope to submit “compliant bids [based on the original design] and variant designs for both the U2 Tower and Britain Quay”.

      Architecture Ireland, the official journal of the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland, planned to publish images of the five entries in its latest edition. Sources claim it postponed publication when the competition’s organisers claimed this could prejudice the decision-making process. But the journal said yesterday there was no pressure from the DDDA. “It was a normal editorial decision,” it stated.

      BCDH would not comment on the latest developments until a winner had been chosen.

      Foster, one of the world’s best known architects, is also collaborating with U2 on the €150m redevelopment of the band’s Clarence hotel in Dublin, another project mired in controversy. Michael Smith, a former chairman of An Taisce, described plans to create a new nine-storey hotel on the Liffey as “execrable”.

      Dublin city council said the planning application for the hotel was dormant and has given U2 untilthe end of September to reply to a lengthy list of questions about the development.

      U2’s involvement in the development of the Britain Quay site emerged earlier this summer.

      After rival bidders raised concerns about a possible conflict of interest, the DDDA released a statement insisting members of the band “will not have any role or involvement, directly or indirectly” during the assessment.

    • #750280
      Devin
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      There’s an awful lot of visual masturbation going on with the U2 tower. Every time you see any image of it, be it model or montage, it looks different. I mean, what is that (above)? It doesn’t even look like a building. Everyone knows the finished building would look nothing like that ….

      @Mick wrote:

      Critics brand Docklands development a farce as design untwists (by Colin Coyle, The Sunday Times, August 5, 2007)

      To guard against conflicts of interest, the judging panel had been provided with numbers corresponding to projects, with entrants’ names withheld to ensure anonymity. But when the winner was picked, no number corresponding to its entry could be found. The organisers considered posting an image of their first choice on a website to track down its creators, but were advised this could result in a legal challenge.

      Was this intrigue ever solved? Was the architect of the winning design ever identified? How come in all this time since 2003 an image has never surfaced of the winning design? Will it ever be seen? It’s all so strange ……

    • #750281
      jdivision
      Participant

      I think there was an image of the winning design. I’m pretty sure I saw it.

    • #750282
      SOC
      Participant

      @Mick wrote:

      Critics brand Docklands development a farce as design untwists (by Colin Coyle, The Sunday Times, August 5, 2007)

      It is a story that already has as many twists as a Joshua tree. But the latest shift over plans for the landmark U2 tower in Dublin’s docklands isn’t a twist at all, it’s quite the reverse.

      The twisty design that won a competition for the site seems to have disappeared and left its critics to complain that the project has turned into a farce.

      In 2003 a panel of judges selected by the site owner, the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA), announced that a Dublin based firm had beaten competition from 541 other entrants to design the 60m tower on Britain Quay. The winning design of Burdon Craig Dunne Henry (BCDH), a twisting tower incorporating apartments and a recording studio for the eponymous band, generated plenty of excitement in architectural circles.

      However, it now appears it wasn’t what either the DDDA or U2, who co-sponsored the competition, were looking for.

      When the DDDA sought tenders to build the tower last year, bidders were told it had more than doubled in size to 130m, which would make it the tallest building in Ireland. An element of “new design” would be permitted as a result.

      Now it has emerged that two of the five designs on a short list to be announced in the next two months have dropped the competition-winning notion of a twisting block.

      One design is being promoted by U2, who have teamed up with Sir Norman Foster, the British architect, and Sean Mulryan, the property developer, to produce a design that is described as “radically different” from BCDH’s concept.

      The twisted tower has also been ignored in a plan submitted by Treasury-Sisk and designed by Zaha Hadid, the award-winning international architect. It is understood that the three other finalists have remained faithful to the original design.

      One of the former entrants, who asked not to be named, criticised the DDDA’s decision to allow proposals that ignored the original winning idea.

      “The first competition was a farce. But what’s happening now is effectively a new competition to ensure the result they want – a tower designed by an international star like Foster or Hadid”.

      This new controversy is a headache the DDDA could do without. The 2003 competition hit the headlines when the design originally chosen had to be scrapped because the architects could not be identified.

      To guard against conflicts of interest, the judging panel had been provided with numbers corresponding to projects, with entrants’ names withheld to ensure anonymity. But when the winner was picked, no number corresponding to its entry could be found. The organisers considered posting an image of their first choice on a website to track down its creators, but were advised this could result in a legal challenge.

      The DDDA has dismissed criticism of the new competition. It said all five short-listed candidates were given scope to submit “compliant bids [based on the original design] and variant designs for both the U2 Tower and Britain Quay”.

      Architecture Ireland, the official journal of the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland, planned to publish images of the five entries in its latest edition. Sources claim it postponed publication when the competition’s organisers claimed this could prejudice the decision-making process. But the journal said yesterday there was no pressure from the DDDA. “It was a normal editorial decision,” it stated.

      BCDH would not comment on the latest developments until a winner had been chosen.

      Foster, one of the world’s best known architects, is also collaborating with U2 on the €150m redevelopment of the band’s Clarence hotel in Dublin, another project mired in controversy. Michael Smith, a former chairman of An Taisce, described plans to create a new nine-storey hotel on the Liffey as “execrable”.

      Dublin city council said the planning application for the hotel was dormant and has given U2 untilthe end of September to reply to a lengthy list of questions about the development.

      U2’s involvement in the development of the Britain Quay site emerged earlier this summer.

      After rival bidders raised concerns about a possible conflict of interest, the DDDA released a statement insisting members of the band “will not have any role or involvement, directly or indirectly” during the assessment.

      This isn’t a farce it’s a stitch up.

      Paul Maloney and Ballymore have stitched this up between them but they have completely miscalculated the sh*t that will hit the fan when they make that announcement. I doubt Paul Maloney’s actions and trips over the last year will bear the scrutiny they are about to get.

    • #750283
      millennium
      Participant

      Why do Architects, world renowned or otherwise, allow themselves to be exploited by Clients or Sponsors who promise juicy commissions but yet cannot deliver. Not just once but again and again. In this case the Client, who is also the Sponsor believe that they are also an unaccountable Planning Authority. But they are not the final arbiter. Public derision and the High Court beckon! How many wasted man/woman hours are involved in this farce?

    • #750284
      SOC
      Participant

      Strong rumours that Paul Maloney will announce the result of his ‘competition’ on Monday 10th of September, henceforth to be known as ‘Murky Monday’!

    • #750285
      cubix
      Participant

      christ will dey jus hurry up and start building/

    • #750286
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Apparently they are just waiting on a new meccano set and a few doozers and they will be underway in jig time;)

    • #750287
      Mick
      Participant

      I just found these on the DDDA website.

      http://www.ddda.ie/index.jsp?1nID=93&2nID=97&3nID=327&nID=328&aID=409

      http://www.ddda.ie/index.jsp?1nID=93&2nID=97&3nID=327&nID=328&aID=412

      I think this must be the announcement of the new design! It looks fantastic!

    • #750288
      darkman
      Participant

      The winning tender is being announced tomorrow I believe acording to the SINDO………

    • #750289
      cubix
      Participant

      oh thank god bring it on before the the watchtower is built and occupied before they lay a brick..

    • #750290
      GregF
      Participant

      Are thay gonna build this at all? ….or is it all talk and no action as usual.

    • #750291
      Pepsi
      Participant

      i’d say it’s all talk and no action. i’d say it’s all talk and no action with the watchtower too.

    • #750292
      Pepsi
      Participant

      are you sure it’s the watchtower though?

    • #750293
      cubix
      Participant

      off topic i know but yet another skyscraper approved for London, getting out of control now..

      http://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/2894

    • #750294
      Anonymous
      Participant

      Anger over structure demolition . . . . . .[From this weeks Dublin People]
      THE Dublin Docklands Development Authority has been criticised for demolishing a protected structure as part of plans for the new U2 tower.
      The old hailing station, on the corner of Sir John Rogerson’s Quay and Britain Quay, was torn down as part of its development plans for the Grand Canal Dock area.
      The hailing station was built in 1907 and was used to direct ships as they docked along the quays. Dockers also congregated at the station to seek out potential employment opportunities.
      The structure is listed on the Dublin City Council register of protected structures.
      However, under the Dublin Docklands Development Act 1997, the Master Plan for the Docklands Area takes precedence over the Dublin City Development Plan including its record of protected structures.
      Former Environment Minister, Dick Roche, signed an order before he left office to protect the hailing station by record only.

      This means that the only remaining record of the structure is on paper.
      The DDDA commissioned Christopher Southgate & Associates to prepare a conservation report on the hailing station.
      The report stated: “The Hailing Station is not an architecturally significant building. However, its function is of historical and social significance….”
      The report considers the building to be of local significance and recommends conservation by record.
      One of the conditions of the demolition was that the footprint of the Hailing Station “be outlined in red brick salvaged from the building and incorporated into the landscape plan insofar as it was consistent with the development of the U2 Tower”.
      A spokesman for the heritage council, An Taisce, said they do not approve of the manner in which the hailing station was demolished.
      “The hailing station was a significant example of maritime history in the Docklands,” he said.
      “The DDDA should be doing all they can to conserve what remains of the area’s past and not wipe it away,” he said.
      “The building should be preserved in some form. An Taisce did not approve of the manner in which it was removed from the record of protected structures. There was no consultation or notification with locals or heritage groups.”
      Damien Cassidy of the Ringsend Environment Group complained that there was no consultation regarding the demolition.
      “At no stage were locals consulted about this,” he claimed.
      “The first people knew about the demolition of the hailing station was when we noticed it had disappeared.”
      However, a spokeswoman for the DDDA rejected claims that the authority had not adequately consulted with the public and heritage groups on the move.
      “What we generally do is put the planning scheme out to all the local communities and anyone who wants to make any submissions then can,” she said.
      “We have the same standard process as the city council would use for planning. We advertise the plans in the papers and state that people can come and make submissions.
      “We go right into the communities, in community centres, in our own offices and different parts of the city and then we have it [the plans] available on the website as well.
      “An Taisce can make submissions on any of our plans as part of the public consultation. As regards the public, we open it as far as we can and the plan was fully available to the public to make submissions on it as well.”

    • #750295
      old man troy
      Participant

      @cubix wrote:

      off topic i know but yet another skyscraper approved for London, getting out of control now..

      http://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/2894

      had a look at that, awful. Bring on the U2 tower, and the Berkeley Court for that matter.

    • #750296
      cubix
      Participant

      I don’t think its too bad,perhaps a bit asian looking.. hopefully the U2 tower will be better!!if they get around to building the dawn ting

    • #750297
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      I am so eager to see the Foster and Hadid proposals, when can we expect some images to be released!

    • #750298
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @cubix wrote:

      off topic i know but yet another skyscraper approved for London, getting out of control now..

      http://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/2894

      While I’d like to see more high quality high rises in the docklands, this London bullding shows the danger. I think I’d rather our 6 floor stumpy IFSC buildings than that yoke, they’re monotonous but inoffensive/inconspicuous compared with that.

    • #750299
      cubix
      Participant

      yeah i probably used a bad example to illustrate that a lot of them are being approved..out of interest are there many other high rise proposals waiting for planning permission right now. In dublin that is..?

    • #750300
      jdivision
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      While I’d like to see more high quality high rises in the docklands, this London bullding shows the danger. I think I’d rather our 6 floor stumpy IFSC buildings than that yoke, they’re monotonous but inoffensive/inconspicuous compared with that.

      I think the Watchtower is as bad as that building TBH

    • #750301
      JoePublic
      Participant

      I really hope they don’t f**k this up, we don’t need another bloody Carlton

    • #750302
      ForzaIrlanda
      Participant

      I saw these pics of a similar tower to U2 on another website. The tower is in Sarajevo.

    • #750303
      jdivision
      Participant

      It’s been delayed again.

    • #750304
      darkman
      Participant

      Cant say im supprised but how do you know? It was supposed to be revealved last week who won the tender,

    • #750305
      jdivision
      Participant

      Does anybody know who’s on the assessment committee?

    • #750306
      SOC
      Participant

      Did anyone hear the discussion on ‘Drivetime’ (RTE Radio 1) on Thursday evening about the Giants Causeway / Heneghen Peng debacle? Some architectural commentator was questioning the value of international architectural competitions in the light of Heneghen Peng’s winning design for a visitor centre at Giants Causeway apparently having been dumped in favour of some private developer design and citing Zaha Hadid’s Cardiff Opera House too.

      I wonder if BCDH’s twisting tower will be the next victim of this insidious trend?

      Shame on John McLaughlin (DDDA) if this is his legacy!

    • #750307
      GregF
      Participant

      Anyone see the Dave McWilliams programme on Monday night about the demise of our economy and the ‘Celtic Tiger’ etc….. It showed the gleaming new glass towers and edifices of China and Dubai, shining in the sunshine against a brilliant blue sky and then switched to the Dublin docks of grey skies and insignificant squat block land. Hard to believe there was ever a boom on here by the looks of it 🙁

    • #750308
      mcdanish
      Participant

      @GregF wrote:

      Anyone see the Dave McWilliams programme on Monday night about the demise of our economy and the ‘Celtic Tiger’ etc….. It showed the gleaming new glass towers and edifices of China and Dubai, shining in the sunshine against a brilliant blue sky and then switched to the Dublin docks of grey skies and insignificant squat block land. Hard to believe there was ever a boom on here by the looks of it 🙁

      Lets be realistic here, although the docks has been a missed opportunity in many respects it is far from the finished article.The watchtower and the U2 tower will give a new dimension to this area and other on going projects will bulk up the area.
      Dublin is no Dubai or Shanghai and is never going to be.We have had a boom here fair enough but on a world scale it is insignificant. If Irelands economy imploded the world economy wouldnt even blink.Dublin has changed hugely in 20 years for the better but to expect this to compare to Shanghai or Dubai is crazy.

      Regarding the U2 tower the delays are incredible.Also anyone know whats happening to the site beside it where contruction has been halted for some timenow?

    • #750309
      Keen
      Participant

      @mcdanish wrote:

      Lets be realistic here, although the docks has been a missed opportunity in many respects it is far from the finished article.The watchtower and the U2 tower will give a new dimension to this area and other on going projects will bulk up the area.
      Dublin is no Dubai or Shanghai and is never going to be.We have had a boom here fair enough but on a world scale it is insignificant. If Irelands economy imploded the world economy wouldnt even blink.Dublin has changed hugely in 20 years for the better but to expect this to compare to Shanghai or Dubai is crazy.

      Regarding the U2 tower the delays are incredible.Also anyone know whats happening to the site beside it where contruction has been halted for some timenow?

      Ireland’s economy was the fastest growing economy in europe in 2000 something line 9% and we are one of if not the fastest growing country in Europe in respect to population. Our economy is larger than Nigeria’s for christ sake (Population 120 million). , and our economy is larger than the UAE – that must be hard to swallow? Our economy ranks arouns 50th in the world based on GDP, not even taking into account population.
      In the terms of pace of development, we must be one of the slowest in the world…
      We could have made something out of the boom we had for sure, we threw a few competitions, we marketed a few changes, then there was the NDP plan – but we always seems to hit on mediocrity??? Where is our ambition, and then the follow ups to make it happen? This U2 farce is just boring at this stage. It’s a pity because the tower got a lot of us excited

    • #750310
      Rory W
      Participant

      Yeah cool – if we lived in a dictatorship we could have big glass towers built by borderline slavery.

      Yes we had a fast growing economy, but we were coming from borderline bankrupcy so it was a very small base that we were actually growing from (we were catching up with the rest of western Europe anyway) and rate of growth means bugger all when your economy is tiny anyway. Anyone old enough to remember the early 80s will tell you how much Dublin and the economy has changed.

    • #750311
      cubix
      Participant

      people can look at it whatever way they want, the bottom line is in a 15 year construction boom 95% of everything we built is bland boring shite…

    • #750312
      jdivision
      Participant

      McWilliams is very experienced in financial world, Hobbs less successful. From McWilliam’s own website:
      He was educated at Trinity College Dublin and the College of Europe Bruges, Belgium and before moving into writing and broadcasting he spent ten years in banking. First as an economist with the Irish Central Bank, where he helped draft the Irish Submission to the Maastricht Treaty and advised the authorities during the 1992-93 exchange rate crisis.

      He then moved to investment banking with UBS – European’s largest bank – where he was appointed the youngest Director ever at the age of 27. He was the first economist to predict the 1990s boom in Ireland which later became known as the “Celtic Tiger” in a 1994 in-depth report on Ireland, its economy and its prospects. He traveled extensively in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, devising bank strategy in both regions

      He moved from UBS to BNP where he was Head of Emerging Markets Research.
      During his time there, the Emerging markets team was the most profitable unit of the Banque Nationale de Paris world-wide.

      As for having nothing to moan about in this country, I take it you’re being sarcastic.

    • #750313
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @jdivision wrote:

      As for having nothing to moan about in this country, I take it you’re being sarcastic.

      If there’s one thing the Irish ARE world leaders at, it’s moaning

    • #750314
      alonso
      Participant

      All I’ll say is if we were rich enough to build so much shite we were rich enough to build higher quality stuff. To accept the built environemtn created by the boom without question smacks of Irish self deprecating “sure it’s grand, we’re only Ireland” ballsology. The Docks is a monument to this attitude. It’s better than what it was, but totally useless compared to what it should have been. It’s not “moaning”, it’s striving for a better country…

    • #750315
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @alonso wrote:

      All I’ll say is if we were rich enough to build so much shite we were rich enough to build higher quality stuff. To accept the built environemtn created by the boom without question smacks of Irish self deprecating “sure it’s grand, we’re only Ireland” ballsology. The Docks is a monument to this attitude. It’s better than what it was, but totally useless compared to what it should have been. It’s not “moaning”, it’s striving for a better country…

      You do have a good point Alonso, there’s just a balance to be struck – the Irish (imho) are far too negative about Ireland generally. Yes the docklands could certainly be better. Hopefully better things to come.

    • #750316
      jdivision
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      If there’s one thing the Irish ARE world leaders at, it’s moaning

      If you’d lived in the docklands you wouldn’t be saying that. I did. I moved out after six months. It was horrendous. Things will improve eventually but the IFSC phase 2 in particular has largely been a disaster

    • #750317
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @jdivision wrote:

      If you’d lived in the docklands you wouldn’t be saying that. I did. I moved out after six months. It was horrendous. Things will improve eventually but the IFSC phase 2 in particular has largely been a disaster

      I actually live in Grand canal dock, for the last year 😀

      I think gc dock will be seen as mostly successful, agreed the ifsc is pretty crap.

    • #750318
      alonso
      Participant

      I’d agree that GCD looks to be better. There’s already 2 medium rises breaking the monotony on the southside compared to the muck in the IFSC

    • #750319
      jdivision
      Participant

      A new northside v southside debate begins:)

    • #750320
      alonso
      Participant

      I’ll do a pre-emptive even-it-up exercise by saying Laguna’s better than the Ocean Bar so 🙂

    • #750321
      constat
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      If there’s one thing the Irish ARE world leaders at, it’s moaning

      Must disagree with you there JP, the French are streets ahead of the Irish when it comes to moaning !

    • #750322
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @constat wrote:

      Must disagree with you there JP, the French are streets ahead of the Irish when it comes to moaning !

      But is it that the French moan about everybody else, whereas we moan about ourselves? 🙂

    • #750323
      GregF
      Participant

      @alonso wrote:

      All I’ll say is if we were rich enough to build so much shite we were rich enough to build higher quality stuff. To accept the built environemtn created by the boom without question smacks of Irish self deprecating “sure it’s grand, we’re only Ireland” ballsology. The Docks is a monument to this attitude. It’s better than what it was, but totally useless compared to what it should have been. It’s not “moaning”, it’s striving for a better country…

      Spot on….I agree!

    • #750324
      JoePublic
      Participant

      From yesterday’s Sunday business post



      U2 still haven’t got what they’re looking for
      23 September 2007 By Neil Callanan
      Seven years after it was first mooted, the proposed U2 tower for Dublin’s docklands remains strangled in red tape, design-related disagreements and planning squabbles.

      The U2 tower was intended to define the docklands area of Dublin: an emblem of new Ireland, an elegantly twisting structure close to the emerging centre of commerce in Dublin. Instead, it is in danger of becoming a symbol of planning logjams and indecision.

      In July last year, the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) sought expressions of interest to develop the tower and an adjoining campshire site. The closing date for submissions was October 2006, and a decision on the winning bid was expected by the end of the year.

      But, nearly a year after the initial deadline for expressions of interest, an announcement on the winning bidder has yet to be made. Shortlisted bidders had been expecting an announcement by September 11,but that deadline passed and the winning bidder’s identity remains a secret.

      A spokeswoman for the DDDA said that, ‘‘due to scheduling issues, it is now likely to be early October, at the next meeting of the board of the Authority’’ before a decision is made. However, that could spark off yet another set of problems for the project.

      One shortlisted bidder for the project has told The Sunday Business Post that he hopes his bid will not be selected because of knock-on effects from the recent downturn in the housing market. He said that property developers had bid for the site when the market was still strong, but that the fall in residential prices would make it more difficult for the project to be viable.

      The recent tightening in the credit markets – the so-called ‘‘credit crunch’’ – is already affecting the funding of projects such as the Shard of Glass tower in London, and could make securing the finance to develop the site more difficult.

      The shortlist of five bidders for the tower was announced by the DDDA in February. It comprised Ballymore Properties; Royal BAM Group; a joint venture between Treasury Holdings and Sisk; Sean Dunne’s Mountbrook Homes; and the River II Partnership, made up of the Kelly, McCormack, Elliott and Flynn families, who are involved in property development.

      When the shortlist was announced, the five bidders were also told to submit design proposals for an adjacent site on Britain Quay, and to provide an integrated plan for that site and the tower. The developers were required to bid for the pre-agreed design for theU2 Tower, and also to bid for their own architects’ designs for the sites.

      However, it subsequently emerged that the members of U2 were in fact bidding for the tower site themselves, in a joint venture with Ballymore. The DDDA has not explained why U2’s involvement was not initially disclosed, or whether it was even aware of it when the bids were submitted.

      The DDDA, through its solicitors, did write to the other companies on the shortlist to say that the rock superstars would ‘‘not have any role or involvement, directly or indirectly’’ in examining bids for the project.

      Since the DDDA’s decision to allow bidders to use their own architects’ designs, there has been sustained speculation that the original design of the tower will be scrapped. A spokeswoman for the DDDA said she could not comment on the matter.

      Felim Dunne, a principal in architecture firm BCDH, which designed the tower, did not return a call seeking comment on whether his firm had been told that its design was no longer to be used.

      Two of the shortlisted bidders have told this newspaper that if theU2 tower site design is used, the site of 2.5 acres will sell for at least €75 million, and possibly as much as €100million,when the cost of providing the upper floors of the tower for U2 is included in the cost.

      However, they stated that bids for the variant tower designs were significantly below those figures. Ballymore/U2 and Treasury Holdings/Sisk are understood to have submitted variant tower designs, and the Ballymore/U2 bid is the favourite to win.

      The competition to design a tower for the site was run in 2003, but the identity of the original winning design could not be ascertained. It subsequently emerged that it should have been disqualified in the first place, so BCDH’s proposal was declared the winner.

      The BCDH proposal is for a tower with a 45-degree twist, a feature that has become increasingly common in towers worldwide. International architecture firm Skidmore Owings & Merrill (SOM) designed the 80-storey Infinity Tower in Dubai, which has a 90-degree twist.

      Architect Santiago Calatrava, who designed the Samuel Beckett bridge for the docklands in Dublin, has designed numerous twisting buildings, including the Chicago Spire, which is being developed by Garrett Kelleher’s Shelbourne Developments.

      The U2 tower was originally meant to be 60 metres high but, by 2005, the height of the proposed building had increased to 100 metres.

      When planning was eventually sought last year, the tower had more than doubled in height to 130 metres.

      Planning was later granted for the 36storey tower over two storeys of basement accommodation, measuring a total of just under 35,000 square metres. The development was only put out to tender after talks between the DDDA and property developer Liam Carroll, who owns a large adjacent site on Britain Quay, broke down.

      The minutes from a DDDA council meeting in July 2005 show that the authority was in active negotiations with Carroll to seek a joint development of his property and the U2 tower site. The DDDA entered the talks because it wanted only the U2 tower built on that side of the river.

      The problem was that Carroll already had planning permission for a 100 metre tower on his site. The DDDA proposed that it would offer Carroll two options for a joint development of his property and the DDDA site, but one of the conditions was that only theU2 tower would be built.

      After the meeting, the DDDA was accused of being ‘‘breathtaking in its arrogance’’ by Gerry Fay, one of its council members, for assuming that its tower should take precedence over Carroll’s, which already had planning permission.

      It was ‘‘patently obvious that the DDDA completely underestimated the scale of development required at this location in 2000,when the original plans were drawn up’’, Fay wrote in a letter to the DDDA.

      ‘‘The DDDA were caught ball-watching – rolled and mugged, once again they are now playing catch-up.”

      The DDDA wants only one tower built on the south docks because it wishes to create a ‘‘landmark entry’’ to Dublin via the U2 tower on the south docks and the Watchtower building being planned by businessman Harry Crosbie on the north docks.

      The reasoning behind this has yet to be fully explained, given that very few people will enter the city by passing the sites.

      Last year, the DDDA decided to add an amendment to its planning scheme for the Grand Canal Dock area. It said that only one tower was to be developed in the area and made it site-specific, meaning that the only place where one could be built was on theU2 tower site.

      ‘‘The requirements for such a tower would not be satisfied by any other landmark tower that may be permitted or constructed in the Grand Canal Dock area,” stated the draft amendment.

      This proved a significant move, because Carroll was not even close to completing the development of his site and the planning permission was due to expire.

      Carroll started work on the site, but Dublin City Council, which had granted permission for his tower and associated developments, ruled that insufficient works had been carried out and an extension of the planning permission would not be appropriate. An appeal was also turned down.

      Carroll lodged legal proceedings in the Commercial Court in March challenging the council’s decision. If he does not win the case, he is unlikely to ever be allowed build a tower on his site.

      An informed source told The Sunday Business Post last week there had been talks between the DDDA and Carroll on the issue and suggested a possible solution might be reached, by allowing increased density on his site in return for reducing the tower’s height. A senior industry source also said the DDDA was in talks with Carroll to acquire some of his site.

      It is not clear why the DDDA is so emphatic about only having one tower in the south docks. The docklands has few high-profile buildings – a point emphasised by the artists shortlisted for a sculpture for the docks, with sculptor Dorothy Cross branding the area ‘‘generic and second rate’’.

      Perhaps in acknowledgement of this, the DDDA commissioned a tall buildings study for the North Lotts area and is also part of a consortium planning high rise development on the South Wharf site in Ringsend.

      Most property developers believe the authority will eventually have to back down and allow more high-rise development in the docklands.

      Many developers have already prepared for it, developing buildings with foundations strong enough to allow them increase their property heights when the DDDA eases its height restrictions.

      Going up seems a matter of when, not if – but, as those involved in the U2 tower process have found to their cost, ‘‘when’’ can be an awfully long time where the docklands are concerned.

    • #750325
      paul h
      Participant

      What a bunch of morons at the DDDA
      Absolute lack of any vision whatsoever
      They should prosecuted for holding back the development of a nation….

    • #750326
      Devin
      Participant

      I see the Members of the Travelling Community have finally been moved on from Britain Quay and concrete girders have been placed all about to stop them coming back.

    • #750327
      notjim
      Participant

      @Devin wrote:

      I see the Members of the Travelling Community have finally been moved on from Britain Quay and concrete girders have been placed all about to stop them coming back.

      I think it is a shocking failure on the part of the DDDA that they have made no attempt to develop culturally appropriate urban accommodation for travellers in this area. Although there is no existing model for traveller accommodation in a medium or high rise urban context, I do not accept that this means that it could not be acheived and, I feel, it was the responsibility of the DDDA to be at the vanguard in this regard.

    • #750328
      alonso
      Participant

      Like stacking their caravans?

      I kid, but i disagree. It’d be nice to think that a functioning, clean, halting site could be provided in this area, but all you would hear would be a collective cry of “there goes the neighbourhood” echoing up the Liffey.

    • #750329
      darkman
      Participant

      @notjim wrote:

      I think it is a shocking failure on the part of the DDDA that they have made no attempt to develop culturally appropriate urban accommodation for travellers

      I dont.

    • #750330
      tommyt
      Participant

      @notjim wrote:

      I think it is a shocking failure on the part of the DDDA that they have made no attempt to develop culturally appropriate urban accommodation for travellers in this area. Although there is no existing model for traveller accommodation in a medium or high rise urban context, I do not accept that this means that it could not be acheived and, I feel, it was the responsibility of the DDDA to be at the vanguard in this regard.

      Although halting sites are acceptable in principle in nearly every statutory zoning context in every Development Plan I think any travellers hoping to settle legitimately in the Docklands only hope is that they get shunted down Poolbeg between the incinerator and the water treatment plant. They’re not quite there yet but that would be par for the course. I guess it’s the same family grouping that have been drofting ever Eastwards as the Docklands develop, they’ve been around the South Docks at least 10 years at this stage.

    • #750331
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      @tommyt wrote:

      Although halting sites are acceptable in principle in nearly every statutory zoning context in every Development Plan I think any travellers hoping to settle legitimately in the Docklands only hope is that they get shunted down Poolbeg between the incinerator and the water treatment plant. They’re not quite there yet but that would be par for the course. I guess it’s the same family grouping that have been drofting ever Eastwards as the Docklands develop, they’ve been around the South Docks at least 10 years at this stage.

      They’ve been there longer, or some have. When I was a kid, Raleigh Ireland were on Hanvover Quay and i remember there was an encampment there then – late 70s early 80s

    • #750332
      paul h
      Participant

      I’m a fairly liberal person with most issues,
      but its preposterous to think that any group of people can set up and move in,
      anywhere,on any piece of real estate
      Especially a prized chunk of land like in docklands
      Why should i have to work my ass off saving and working?
      Maybe i should head to woodies or somethin pick up some ply wood and nails
      and build my own little house in Stephens green

    • #750333
      tommyt
      Participant

      @paul h wrote:

      I’m a fairly liberal person with most issues,
      but its preposterous to think that any group of people can set up and move in,
      anywhere,on any piece of real estate
      Especially a prized chunk of land like in docklands
      Why should i have to work my ass off saving and working?
      Maybe i should head to woodies or somethin pick up some ply wood and nails
      and build my own little house in Stephens green

      That would be an ecumenical matter. What other way has land come into private ownership over the centuries in that area other than the method you outline above?
      Maybe Sir John Rogerson’s descendents should go down there and reclaim their stone that’s keeping the place from becoming a salt marcsh once again:)

    • #750334
      notjim
      Participant

      @paul h wrote:

      I’m a fairly liberal person with most issues,
      but its preposterous to think that any group of people can set up and move in,
      anywhere,on any piece of real estate
      Especially a prized chunk of land like in docklands
      Why should i have to work my ass off saving and working?
      Maybe i should head to woodies or somethin pick up some ply wood and nails
      and build my own little house in Stephens green

      If you and your family had been living on Stephens Green as long as anyone could remember and your house building plans were sympathetic to good planning and the local built environment, I would have no trouble with you building there and if you belonged to an abused and marginalized minority with a distinct, ignored and valuable culture, I would actively support you and your little house.

    • #750335
      cubix
      Participant

      Ballymore are behind the pan peninsula towers in London plus a few other planned and approved projects in the city.These are nearly finished..


    • #750336
      jdivision
      Participant

      But were designed by SOM not Foster

    • #750337
      jdivision
      Participant

      If they are, then blame the DDDA. They’re the ones they issued as being shortlisted.

    • #750338
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      This thread has been edited due to the poster known as Jimllfixit removing all his posts which destroys the continuity of the thread.
      Hence I have had to remove replies directed at his misguided allegations.

    • #750339
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      This thread has been edited due to the poster known as Jimllfixit removing all his posts which destroys the continuity of the thread.
      Hence I have had to remove replies directed at his misguided allegations.

      The plot thickens

    • #750340
      alonso
      Participant

      there was an article today in IMoS all about this, and the court cases that will inevitably ensue after the DDDA board meeting tomorrow.

      More importantly Archiseek gets a mention! Hurray!

      “In the immediate aftermath of the controversy (original decision) Archiseek.com, a popular online resource for architects, canvassed competition entrants and found six that had not been contacted by the auditors”

      Not exactly a riveting mention, but a mention nonetheless. Tomorrow should bring interesting news though. Maybe the title of this thread should then be changed to “War? – U2 Tower to be Taller”

    • #750341
      igy
      Participant

      There should be an option to disallow people editing their own posts after X days. the potential for abuse is greater than the annoyance caused by genuinely needed edits having to go though a moderator IMO

    • #750342
      darkman
      Participant

      Just to clarify – Is the DDDA finally to make a decision tomorrow? – and – will we see additional infomation on the tower itself I wonder:confused:

    • #750343
      alonso
      Participant

      according to the article they will. Don’t know if we’ll get any more info though

    • #750344
      darkman
      Participant

      Any word? Im sure I could be forgiven for thinking we have been led up the garden path again:rolleyes:

    • #750345
      Mick
      Participant

      Is it just me or was a decision meant to be announced on the 8th?

      The article was:

      “Tower’s latest twist will pit McGuinness against U2 and end up in court” by Michael O’Farrell. Published in The Irish Mail on Sunday 07/10/07.

      Tomorrow, in the board room of the Dublin Docklands Development Authority, eight men and women will finally give the go-ahead for the U2 Tower – one of the most controversial construction projects Ireland has yet seen.

      With millions of euro, not to mention huge prestige, at stake, some of Ireland’s and Europe’s top developers, architects and lawyers will be watching closely. So will the four band members of U2.

      But whatever decision the board reaches, it is unlikely to signal the final chapter in what has already been a seven year saga replete with disagreement, mishap and administrative difficulties.

      For it is now widely believed that the authority has abandoned the futuristic “Twisted Tower” design that it announced as the winner of a costly and problem-fraught architectural competition in a blaze of publicity in 2003.

      If that turns out to be the case, then at least one disgruntled architect and one severely miffed property tycoon, the Irish Mail on Sunday has learned, will take their grievances to court.

      The fallout could even lead to some serious friction between U2 and their manager, Paul McGuinness. For the band’s joint bid with Ballymore Properties is now the hot favourite to win the multi-million contract – and McGuinness has close family ties to the Blackrock-based architects, Burdon Craig Dunne Henry (BCDH), whose winning design now seems to have been shelved.

      That ‘Dunne’ is Felim Dunne, Mr. McGuinness’s brother-in-law, whose close relationship once resulted in the architect doing work on U2’s Hanover Quay studio, where the entire saga began.

      Now, however, U2 have a new favourite architect – Sir Norman Foster, who designed the controversial glass-donned expansion for Bono and The Edge’s Clarence Hotel. If the Ballymore Properties/U2 tender does get the go-ahead tomorrow, it will mean an entirely different, Foster-designed project will be built – opening the door for BCDH to go to court to have their design reinstated and stop the U2 design form being built.

      He won’t be the only Dunne beating a path to the Four Courts, either. One of four tenders rivalling the Ballymore/U2 proposal has come from Sean Dunne, the Baron of Ballsbridge. But his tender is based on the original BCDH design that won the architectural competition. If Ballymore/U2 get the contract – and sources close to the band are confident they will – Sean Dunne, too, will head to court, arguing that the docklands authority effectively changed the rules.

      One source close to Sean Dunne said: ‘Sean is hopping mad about this. He’s spent a lot of money preparing his bid on the basis that the DDDA was adamant that the twisting design was the one it really wanted. Now it looks as if that was not the case and he was wasting his time and cash.’

      The taxpayer will be pretty miffed too, for the State-owned DDDA is rumoured to have spent €10m – on the competition itself, architects’ fees and ‘pre-development’ work – on the ‘Twisted Tower’

      The saga began in August 2001 when the DDDA served a compulsory purchase order on U2’s Hanover Quay studio alongside the Grand Canal Dock.

      The authority wanted to demolish the studio to make way for a civic public space around the canal basin. Initially, U2 fought the order , lodging four appeals to An Bord Pleanala in an attempt to save the studio they have recorded in since 1994.

      However, in a shrewd move, the band instead concluded a valuable deal with the DDDA after letting it be known that they would ‘definitely consider moving to somewhere in the vicinity should a suitable property be offered as an alternative’.

      The result was that U2 came away with the top two floors of the new landmark tower, which would also bear the band’s name.

      Announcing the deal in and international design competition, Bono was typically loquacious. The once ‘extraordinary’ city of Dublin has been ‘defaced and vandalised’ through ‘corruption and cronyism’, he said in the summer of 2002.

      ‘Its hard to argue with people who know what they’re doing,’ he said of the decision to destroy the Hanover studio.

      ‘We just have to get out of the way. It’s not the best thing for U2 but we have to concede it’s the best thing for the city.’

      But the sheer pulling-power of the U2 name resulted in the DDDA being completely swamped with more than 600 entries from architects as far flung as Texas and the Dominican Republic.

      The judges, including U2 bassist Adam Clayton, chose a winner. But a complicated system set up to protect the impartiality of the process had backfired. No on e know who had actually submitted the winning entry and not even a full audit by PricewaterhouseCoopers could get to the bottom of the mystery. So a new winner was chosen.

      In the immediate aftermath of the controversy, Archiseek.com, a popular online resource for architects, canvassed competition entrants and found that six had not been contacted by the auditors.

      The DDDA has always disclaimed responsibility for lost or missing entries though sources close to the selection process suggest that the volume of paperwork simply overwhelmed administrators.

      Ultimately, BCDH’s Twisted Tower was officially named the winner and, following a tendering process, five development consortium’s were short-listed to build the tower and develop the area around it. The five were Ballymore, the Dutch Royal BAM Group, which owns contractor Ascon Rohcon; a joint venture between Treasury Holdings and Sisk; Sean Dunne’s Mountbrook Homes and the River 2 Partnership.

      There was more controversy when it emerged that U2 was associated with the Ballymore bid but the DDDA moved to reassure the other four bidders with a letter form its lawyers A&L Goodbody.

      ‘Neither U2 nor its representatives have had any role in setting rules for the contest,’ the letter read.

      But rumours that the DDDA had dumped the twist design have long circulated possibly because the height of the tower has been more than doubled from 60m to 130m since the competition or perhaps because of the perceived difficulty and cost of actually constructing such a complex structure which would have been the tallest building in Ireland.

      But sources suggested that most of those who submitted tenders never expected to have to work on the original concept.
      ‘There’s no way they expected to have to work on the original design. If they did, they wouldn’t enter’ said one associate. Under the stated rule of the tender process, all bidders were required to submit ‘compliant bids’ based on the competition-winning BCDH design.

      However, the rules also allowed ‘variant bids’ or completely new proposals. It is known that many of the development bids have brought completely new architects on board.

      Others, such as Sean Dunne, are understood to have sought and received reassurances that the original design is the preferred option and that any failure to submit a new design would not leave his bid disadvantaged.

      Mr. Dunne is understood to be considering a legal challenge if tomorrow’s decision goes in favour of an altered design.

      Peter Halpenny, director of property and development at Sean Dunne’s Mountbrook Homes, declined to comment on the possibility of a legal challenge. However, it is thought that any legal action taken by Sean Dunne would rely on a key sentence in the tender document sent out by the DDDA to the five short-listed developers.

      It says: ‘Following an international architectural competition, a stunning twisted tower design, prepared by BCDH architects, was chosen by the authority as its preferred design. The design has now been further refined and the authority has undertaken critical elements of the pre-development work to establish an attractive development context for the private development sector.’

      If, as MoS understands, Sean Dunne has put in the most competitive bid for the ‘preferred’ design, his lawyers will want to know precisely why he hasn’t won the contract.

      Although Felim Dunne also declined to respond to requests for comment from the MoS, it is understood that BCDH, too, is considering a legal challenge if its winning design is dropped.

      Asked about the possibility of legal action, the DDDA declined to make any comment in advance of tomorrow’s board meeting.

      But whatever decision the DDDA board reaches tomorrow, the ongoing saga surrounding Ireland’s would-be tallest building seems far from over.

    • #750346
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      winner shall be in the mornings Irish Times….
      expect this one to run and run

    • #750347
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      winner shall be in the mornings Irish Times….
      expect this one to run and run

      OOOH I’m going to have to stay up till it’s on the website now 😀

    • #750348
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      The twisting design is toast…. 😀

    • #750349
      Devin
      Participant

      Great!! There’s just too many twisting towers already for it to have been interesting – Turning Torso, Sarajevo tower, Chicage Spire … it would have looked SO tired by the time it was built.
      But whatever is built will need to very distinctive … needs to much more distinctive than a square block tower …

    • #750350
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      The twisting design is toast….

      Well we’ve already got Libeskind and Calatrava. I wonder what other notches the DDDA would like to have on its bedpost?

      Mind you, if it clears the way for the quiet disappearance of Hotel UFO at The Clarence…

    • #750351
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Won’t they have to reapply for planning permission?

    • #750352
      GrahamH
      Participant

      Yes I wonder if the hotel would be incorporated. It’d save them a heck of a lot of hassle – especially given Mr Smith’s recent determination to go all the way to the High Court – while also going some way towards validating the more recent ‘hiccups’ of the tower project.

    • #750353
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      Won’t they have to reapply for planning permission?

      Dear DDDA,

      Re. Section 25 Application

      Can I build it?

      Thanks.

      Yours,

      N.

      PS One tall building is just like another, right?

      http://www.dublindocklands.ie/files/business/docs/14739gcdpischeme06q4.pdf

    • #750354
      JoePublic
      Participant
    • #750355
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster


      Foster + Partners,

    • #750356
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      @JoePublic wrote:

      Won’t they have to reapply for planning permission?

      t is expected that construction will start next year, with a view to completion by 2011. No planning permission is required, as it is already covered by the Grand Canal Docks planning scheme.

    • #750357
      ctesiphon
      Participant

    • #750358
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      Docklands skyscraper to soar to 180m

      A skyscraper soaring 60m (197ft) higher than the Spire on O’Connell Street has been chosen by the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) as the winner of the latest competition for the U2 Tower at Britain Quay. Frank McDonald , Environment Editor, reports.

      The sensational new scheme has the rock band’s eggshaped recording studio suspended beneath a battery of vertical wind turbines and a huge solar panel at the top. This “energy centre” will raise the overall height from 130m (427ft) to 180m (591ft).

      The tilted triangular tower, designed by Foster + Partners, will include a public viewing platform offering panoramic views over the city and Dublin Bay. This will be located just below U2’s “pod” studio, which will be separated from the structure for acoustic reasons.

      The scheme by Norman Foster’s practice, best known for the Swiss Re or “Gherkin” tower in the City of London, was commissioned by Geranger Ltd, a consortium consisting of Ballymore Properties, developer Paddy McKillen and the members of U2.

      Geranger was selected as “provisional preferred bidder” for the €200 million project. It was chosen ahead of rival tenders from: Treasury Holdings/Sisk; Mountbrook Homes, controlled by developer Seán Dunne; the Dutch-based Royal BAM Group; and the Riverside II Partnership.

      The Treasury Holdings/Sisk scheme, designed by Zaha Hadid, came second in the competition, which was assessed by Chris Wilkinson of Wilkinson Eyre Architects; Shih-Fu Peng of Heneghan Peng Architects; and Michael O’Doherty, former principal architect at the Office of Public Works.

      DDDA director of architecture John McLaughlin said the Foster scheme “had the edge because its public spaces were really well handled” and it provided a gateway to a new bridge over the river Dodder where it joins the Liffey alongside Britain Quay.

      In addition to the tower, which will largely comprise luxury apartments, the scheme includes a five-star hotel in a flanking building to the south, oversailing a block of 34 social and affordable apartments, which comprise 20 per cent of the overall residential content.

      As part of its renewable energy agenda, the south facade of the tower will be clad in solar panels, while the east and west facades will have a three-dimensional quality, “like fishscales”, and the north facade will be “quite sleek”, Mr McLaughlin said. The crinkly east and west facades will conceal generous balconies. Their treatment, as well as the overall profile of the scheme, was inspired by the saw-toothed roof of a warehouse that once stood on the site.

      DDDA chief executive Paul Maloney said the authority was “conscious that this is the most sought-after development in Dublin” and he paid tribute to all the bidders for the “immense amount” of work they had put into their entries and the “very exciting” designs they produced.

      “What we have is the combination of a very strong financial offer with a striking architectural result,” he added. Architectural quality took pre-eminence in the criteria used for judging the competition, accounting for 45 points compared to 40 for the financial aspects of each bid.

      Mr Maloney said the Geranger bid had been selected because it “exceeded the expectations of the brief with the emergence of a breathtaking design uniquely suited to this prominent Docklands site”, and it would provide an “inspirational landmark” for Dublin.

      The original U2 Tower, a twisting structure designed by Blackrock-based architects Burdon Craig Dunne Henry, was judged not feasible to build at a height of just 60m (197ft). So the bar was raised to 130m (427ft) and an adjoining site was added to “make the sums stack up”.

      It is expected that construction will start next year, with a view to completion by 2011. No planning permission is required, as it is already covered by the Grand Canal Docks planning scheme.
      © 2007 The Irish Times

      There’s your hotel, Graham. ‘Oversailing’ the 20% S&A Housing (required under the 2000 GCD Planning Scheme).

    • #750359
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      Re-reading the 2006 Amendment to the GCD Planning Scheme (http://www.dublindocklands.ie/files/…scheme06q4.pdf – it’s the same link as I posted above) I see the following (my emphasis):

      3.2.4 Building height
      Building heights within the blocks will vary in order to achieve appropriate
      urban scale. Maximum numbers of storeys are prescribed for both
      commercial and residential development as shown in Diagram 5. The
      controls will allow for vertically mixed use buildings with commercial,
      residential and other use storeys. The main element of the landmark tower
      should not exceed 100 metres in height
      to the shoulder above existing
      street level. The shoulder is the top of the front wall of the building,
      excluding any parapet. Accommodation above this level must be well set
      back and consistent with architectural and service elements. Such elements
      will be permitted subject to a maximum overall building height not
      exceeding 120 metres above existing street level
      .

      In this regard, please note the headline of the Irish Times article. Perhaps PP will not be as straightforward as was initially presumed?

      (For those unfamiliar, a development proposal in the DDDA area that complies with a prepared scheme doesn’t require PP in the normal way, but the proposal must be in keeping with the scheme which, in this case, is the GCD Planning Scheme as amended in 2006. If it is in keeping, it gets a Certificate of Compliance. If not, then…)

      *** *** ***

      Graham-

      I note from the GCD Amending Planning Scheme document that a hotel was suggested as a use in this location. The question then becomes Will Norm be happy with just the one riverside flop house?

    • #750360
      alonso
      Participant

      from the other side

    • #750361
      millennium
      Participant

      Bears a resemblance to the Deutshe Bank in Sydney, also designed by Norman Foster.
      Probably one of the least successful new high rise buildings in Sydney

      Let me get this right, the previous “winning” design was rejected because it’s author “could not be identified” and the previously announced winning design (the Twisting Tower) has now been rejected because “it was not economical to build”.
      The promoters are also telling us that no planning permission is required (because they are their own planning authority) and there are no third party rights of appeal.
      Due process?!

    • #750362
      Morlan
      Participant

      Resized

      What’s that on the top.. the Eye of Sauron?

      DDDA have certainly changed their tune on building height all of a sudden.

    • #750363
      millennium
      Participant
    • #750364
      GregF
      Participant

      Foster stuff is always kinda cool, but this is terribly angular, compared to all the curvy ‘organic’ shaped stuff today, ie…the Gherkin. Kinda hard to get used to it, after visualising the twisting tower here instead.

    • #750365
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Isn’t it nice that all these developers and architects are fighting each other to build a signature tower in Dublin – so why do they all want to build them in one place? eg. let Treasury build their zaha hadid tower in Spencer dock.

    • #750366
      jdivision
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      Isn’t it nice that all these developers and architects are fighting each other to build a signature tower in Dublin – so why do they all want to build them in one place? eg. let Treasury build their zaha hadid tower in Spencer dock.

      Because they’re not allowed to. DDDA will only allow two towers, that and the Watchtower. Why? Haven’t a clue.

    • #750367
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster
    • #750368
      darkman
      Participant

      180m!!!!!!! This is more like it!:D Not sure whether they should have dropped the twisting design though.

      Strangely the DDDA dont seem to acknowledge that it is 180m high?? They say 120m?

      I have to ask is Frank McDonald sure about the height? It does not look 180m high?

    • #750369
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @jdivision wrote:

      Because they’re not allowed to. DDDA will only allow two towers, that and the Watchtower. Why? Haven’t a clue.

      Time to amend the plan again 🙂

      Come on DDDA, you know you want to.

    • #750370
      GregF
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      What’s that on the top.. the Eye of Sauron?

      Bono’s halo!

      I bet it’ll be a candidate for the Sterling Prize when it’s built.

    • #750371
      jdivision
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      180m!!!!!!! This is more like it!:D Not sure whether they should have dropped the twisting design though.

      Strangely the DDDA dont seem to acknowledge that it is 180m high?? They say 120m?

      I have to ask is Frank McDonald sure about the height? It does not look 180m high?

      Doesn’t he say that includes the wind turbines on top

    • #750372
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      @GregF wrote:

      Foster stuff is always kinda cool, but this is terribly angular, compared to all the curvy ‘organic’ shaped stuff today, ie…the Gherkin. Kinda hard to get used to it, after visualising the twisting tower here instead.

      His Hearst Building in New York is pretty angular, as is his contibution to the new world trade centre. On first glance this has more going for it than either of those buildings, IMO

    • #750373
      GrahamH
      Participant

      Okay, so we have an idea of form – which is eye-catching – but that’s about it thus far. What is Foster’s love affair with night-time renderings?! Even with no planning hurdles to jump through and their requisite glitzy illuminated smoke screens, we still only get a dusky shot. Day-time is what matters.

      Morlan, I would have thought the tower is deliberately tilted to the front?

      Personally I feel the square shape of the previous tower, evenly denoting this special corner site from all viewpoints in the city, was a more elegant solution. I’m not sure how apt this multi-faceted tower is to such a location, but we’ll see how it pans out.

    • #750374
      Morlan
      Participant

      @GrahamH wrote:

      Morlan, I would have thought the tower is deliberately tilted to the front? .

      I think you’re right. It just looks odd to my eyes.

    • #750375
      wearnicehats
      Participant

      Ok we can summarise this as follows:

      Hold a competition, appoint a winner, decide you don’t like it after all, have another one, change the brief, ignore the original parameters, accept the general consensus that Hadid’s scheme is the best and appoint a different starchitect who’s fees are being paid by the “client”. oh, and make it 1/3 taller than you were allowed to while you’re at it.

      That’s what you want – consistency, competency, fairness and integrity. Rock n roll

    • #750376
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster
    • #750377
      massamann
      Participant

      Anybody seen what the Hadid design was? Any links or renders? Gotta say, I’m glad that the twisting design has gone. It seemed to me to be too much of a current trend to last the test of time…

    • #750378
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster
    • #750379
      urbanisto
      Participant

      “spectacular!!” designs aside….this whole thing is starting to turn into one big yawnfest. I mean how hard is it to design and build something!

    • #750380
      el architino
      Participant

      The great EL ARCHITINO would like to express his abhorrence at mister foster’s decision to spread his grubby money-soiled fingers across the Irish sea.

      EL ARCHITINO’s highly developed and cultivated sense of xenophobia has been accosted by the proposition of someone who, not only has not lived on the site for several years, but has never even set foot in this country, designing these projects in Dublin.

      mister foster should stick to what he does best, that is to accrue titles from the royal family and place transportation machines in open fields. His buttered oafish hands have not the delicacy of movement and lightness of touch befitting these sensitive sites. Only EL ARCHITINO could understand the cultural nuances and spiritual significance of this U2 site and that of the Clarence Hotel having slept on the prior by day and urinated in the later by night for the past 16months.

      As no one else is brave enough to ward off this insensitive behemoth from across the water let EL ARCHITINO be the one who shall accept the challenge. mister foster I will meet you at the giants causeway, a site littered with the detritus of architectural war………

    • #750381
      darkman
      Participant

      Im a little confused about just what height this building is going to be. Frank McDonald says 180m in total yet on the DDDA website all it says is

      The consortium’s architects, Foster + Partners, have proposed a stunning design for the 120 metre high tower and adjacent Britain Quay site uniquely situated at the confluence of three waterways, the River Liffey, River Dodder and Grand Canal. The inspirational building will include a public viewing platform at 100 metres

      That would actually be a reduction of 10m:confused: :confused: :confused: If its 180m why dont the DDDA just say so!? Im confused – what height is it? Wind turbine sticking out of the top thatt would be 60m high would look rediculous surely.

    • #750382
      jdivision
      Participant

      I wouldn’t trust anything the DDDA says in relation to anything to do with this project.They’ve gotten facts wrong consistently along the way and issued inaccurate information, by intention or by design, to the media.Anyway there’ll be at least one court case in relation to this

    • #750383
      cubix
      Participant

      180m!! are you kidding me?From practically no high rise building in land to a full blown skyscraper.Prefered the twisting tower as theres still very few of them around but any progress whatsoever is welcomed.Wheres the day time renders…

    • #750384
      Pepsi
      Participant

      there will be something regarding the tower on this evening’s six one news. tune in now to find out. it should be on shortly.

    • #750385
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      Entrance to building
      http://ireland.archiseek.com/news/2007/000292b_lge.html

      Looks cool, is that the road going through it? Kinda looks like it from the main picture. Big enough to take buses?

    • #750386
      darkman
      Participant

      Usual moaners on the news just now. What the hell has this got to do with An Taisce?:mad: Go away.

      As for the residents I sense the NIMBYism is about to rear its head again:rolleyes: ‘Get it the hell away from ringsend’ – Well if he does not mind us asking just where the hell are we going to be able to build tall buildings in Ireland?

      Also to note that standards of RTE journalism remain low. Not once was the 180m figure mentioned. Clearly just absorbed the DDDA press release.

    • #750387
      massamann
      Participant

      120m according to Brian Dobson (and who am I to argue?)

      Good to see the objectors already making their voice heard (on this evenings news). Not sure if I can go along with the Ringsend resident group that only wants maritime-connected buildings to be built in this area.

      I’m sure a brand-spanking new Whaling Station by David Chipperfield would fit right in, but it would bring environmental concerns of a wholly different sort….

    • #750388
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @Pepsi wrote:

      there will be something regarding the tower on this evening’s six one news. tune in now to find out. it should be on shortly.

      Ug they had this nimby from the Ringsend environment group or something on the news saying a tower on the site wasn’t suitable as it’s not a mariatime building or some such nonsense. Honestly, freedom of speech is great and all, but does it really have to apply to stupid people :rolleyes:

    • #750389
      darkman
      Participant

      British architect chosen to design U2 Tower
      12/10/2007 – 18:06:25

      Internationally renowned British architect Norman Foster was today announced as the visionary behind Ireland’s first skyscraper – the U2 Tower.

      The €200m scheme, which will soar 120 metres over Dublin’s docklands, will house the iconic rock band’s egg-shaped recording studio at its peak.

      It was commissioned by Geranger Ltd, a consortium including property developers Ballymore and U2 members Bono, The Edge, Larry Mullen Jnr and Adam Clayton.

      Mr Foster, whose notable projects include the Gherkin in London and the Millau Viaduct in France, was chosen by Dublin’s Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) as the project‘s design winner.

      Paul Maloney, DDDA Chief Executive, said: “We are delighted to have achieved our ambition of realising an inspirational landmark design, while at the same time maximising public usage and access.

      “This design will be a very special building for Docklands and Dublin City while integrating the Britain Quay and U2 Tower buildings in a distinct and coherent fashion on the waterfront,” he said.

      As well as the band’s recording studio, the inspirational building will include a public viewing platform at 100 metres, a public amenity area at the base, hotel, retail and residential accommodation including 20% social and affordable housing.

      Advertisement
      “It will also provide visitors the opportunity to experience spectacular views across Dublin city and bay, and for the community offers significant social and affordable housing potential,” Mr Maloney said.

      An original U2 Tower plan – a twisting structure designed by a Dublin-based architectural firm – was to be built at a height of just 60 metres.

      But following a recent planning amendment for the area, the tower was redesigned and increased to 120 metres in height with an adjoining site added.

      The announcement of preferred bidder status for Geranger Ltd followed a EU tendering process where submissions from four short-listed consortia were considered.

      Mr Foster is an internationally acclaimed architect, having designed some of the world‘s most iconic structures.

      These include the Millau Viaduct in France – the tallest vehicular bridge in the world – the Bilbao Metro and New York‘s Hearst Tower.

      The U2 Tower will be located in the Grand Canal Dock area, where DDDA is working with some of the world’s leading architects on projects such as the Studio Libeskind-designed Grand Canal Theatre, the Manuel Aires Mateus designed hotel, and the recently opened Martha Schwartz designed Grand Canal Square.

      Work on the landmark project is due to begin next year with a completion date expected by 2011.

      For goodness sake I dont know why this 120m figure keeps doing the rounds. I hope the DDDA correct their press release before we end up talking ourselves into building a 120m tower instead of a 180m tower:rolleyes:

      Someone has it wrong. Its either the Irish times or the rest of the media. In a way im thankful that RTE told that Ringsend resident it was 120m – imagine if they said, actually its 180m!

    • #750390
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Okay lets get this straight – the building is 120 or 130 metres – the 180 figure comes from the “stuff” or “energy centre” (windturbines?) stuck on top

      DDDA: The consortium’s architects, Foster + Partners, have proposed a stunning design for the 120 metre high tower
      Irish Times: This “energy centre” will raise the overall height from 130m (427ft) to 180m (591ft).

      But the release from the developers says 120
      “The consortium’s architects, Foster + Partners, have proposed a stunning design for the 120 metre high tower and adjacent Britain Quay site uniquely situated at the confluence of three waterways”

      so I think the Irish Times is wrong

    • #750391
      Adolf Luas
      Participant

      I’m glad to see the back of the twisty tower but am disappointed by Foster’s corporate looking structure. I’d be interested to see Hadid’s proposal.
      Hopefully U2 will have split up by the time this thing’s finished.

    • #750392
      Morlan
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      Im a little confused about just what height this building is going to be.

      It’s all a bit confusing alright.

      Let’s assume that the building in the render is 130m in height.

      100 metres consists of 32 stories with a public observation deck.
      30 metres is an open-air space with U2’s recording ‘pod’ suspended in the centre.
      50 metres of an ‘Alernative Energy Centre’ with solar panels and wind turbines (not shown in the render).

    • #750393
      darkman
      Participant

      I would like Frank McDonald to clarify this because its after creating unnessacary confusion. The DDDA has said 120m – however they have not countered the 180m claim – probrably because they have not been asked! Frank McDonald however has not shown a render of this ‘energy center’ so id like to know what the sources were that told him 180m. Or maybe its the DDDA being economical with the truth because Id say it would have to go back in the planning process if they said 180m. This is very confusing.

    • #750394
      Morlan
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      Looks cool, is that the road going through it? Kinda looks like it from the main picture. Big enough to take buses?

      Buses? 😮

      It’s four stories high (see red lines), so plenty of headroom for double deckers. Don’t tell Bus Átha Cliath that.

      No, I reckon it will be a set down only arrangement for the hotel.

    • #750395
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      I reckon the design will change again – 60 of wind turbines / antennae etc seems a lot when already 120m off the ground – i think the building will creap unwards perhaps taking another 30m of this height over….

    • #750396
      Morlan
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      This is very confusing.

      :rolleyes: I tried. :p

    • #750397
      Morlan
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      I reckon the design will change again – 60 of wind turbines / antennae etc seems a lot when already 120m off the ground – i think the building will creap unwards perhaps taking another 30m of this height over….

      Is that not exactly what I’ve done? :confused: :p

    • #750398
      lostexpectation
      Participant

      @massamann wrote:

      120m according to Brian Dobson (and who am I to argue?)

      Good to see the objectors already making their voice heard (on this evenings news). Not sure if I can go along with the Ringsend resident group that only wants maritime-connected buildings to be built in this area.

      I’m sure a brand-spanking new Whaling Station by David Chipperfield would fit right in, but it would bring environmental concerns of a wholly different sort….

      that was actually an surprising point, consider it for a second what maritime related buildings could you build there?

      maybe the the dublin port should expand into this so called commercial areas then they wouldn’t have to move, makes alot of sense

      did he say something about new york skyscrapers though, ?? those would be the buildings in the port authority area :rolleyes:

      has there any new sea related buildings been built down there at all? every city seems to have one of those ship shaped centres. or perhaps a yacht club like the building nominated for the stirling price, or simply a new ferry terminal or industrial shipping dock?

    • #750399
      darkman
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      :rolleyes: I tried. :p

      Sorry, I know you did (nice pic btw, love the batman sign;) ) however im annoyed now that none of us actually know how tall this building is going to be. Are the DDDA saying they have knocked 10m off the U2 tower? I find the DDDA frustrating at the best of times but this is farcical that on this forum – on the the day the final design is unveiled that we dont know what fuppin height its going to be!?

      Ive a suggestion. The DDDA has kindly given email links on its press release for more info and images if we want them. So I suggest we bombard them with requests until we know for sure. 😉

    • #750400
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      I have everything that is currently available from Ogilvy – everything says 120m – all the news reports say 120m – reuters says 120m

    • #750401
      darkman
      Participant

      OK so we should take it then that Frank McDonald is wrong and the actual height in total is 120m and the DDDA have knocked 10m off the original tower – well this puts a new perspective on the building itself because if thats the case it is very disappointing IMO.

      You see the problem is no one from the DDDA or anywhere else AFAIK has actually said it wont be 180m. Seems a bit strange considering the Irish times is suppose to be a highly reputable newspaper.

      Foster and U2 to Rock Dublin Skyline
      Published on 2007-10-12 by Skyscrapernews.com

      More plans have been proposed for the so-called U2 Tower in Dublin’s Docklands, this time designed by Foster and Partners.

      The new plans for a largely residential tower that reaches a height of 180 metres to the tip of its pinnacle have been developed by Geranger Ltd, a joint venture between Ballymore Properties, Gerry McKillen and members of U2 as the culmination of a long competition into the future of the site.

      The winning 200 million Euro proposals that beat off a second place entry from Zaha Hadid are wedge-shaped with what appears to be an undulating surface on the east and west sides but in reality is contoured to conceal the balconies of the 136 apartments.

      In the crown there is an acoustically separated egg suspended in mid air housed that will be the new recording studio for the band the scheme takes its name after whilst immediately below this will be a new observation platform open to the public all year round.

      A second building stands to the south that will house a hotel and the 34 affordable apartments that make the housing figures balance up. This is allows the developers to take advantage of the increased revenues in the area by combining both plots so that the main tower can be taller than the sums would otherwise be allow.

      Most of the top of the structure is however given over to the creation of renewable power with solar panels and wind turbines planned to be fitted that will help generate the building’s power.

      Whether the architects have factored in the hot air created every time Bono opens his mouth and the sun that shines out his backside has not yet been revealed.

      This is not the first time that U2 have teamed up with developers to construct a tall building that will be topped by their own recording studio. Since 2003 numerous plans have been increased in scale from an initial 70 metres tall but fallen by the wayside including a twisting tower penned by Craig Henry Architects in 2003 that was at one point the favoured concept.

      Thanks to the planning regulations that Grand Central Docks has to encourage development on the site at Britain Quay, they won’t even need to apply for permission to build. The developers hope that this time construction can begin as soon as 2008 for a 2011 completion.

    • #750402
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      @darkman wrote:

      You see the problem is no one from the DDDA or anywhere else AFAIK has actually said it wont be 180m. Seems a bit strange considering the Irish times is suppose to be a highly reputable newspaper..

      okay this is starting to irritate me – they say that the top of the power centre will be 180m but the building tops out at 120m — how hard is this to understand?

    • #750403
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      Buses? 😮

      It’s four stories high (see red lines), so plenty of headroom for double deckers. Don’t tell Bus Átha Cliath that.

      No, I reckon it will be a set down only arrangement for the hotel.

      Well from what I understand, the bridge across the Dodder will be a public transport corridor, so I assume buses travelling across the dodder, through the U2 tower, and on down the quays….

    • #750404
      darkman
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      okay this is starting to irritate me – they say that the top of the power centre will be 180m but the building tops out at 120m — how hard is this to understand?

      they say that the top of the power centre will be 180m

      …….God give me strength…….lets assume that someone actually decided to attach this power center to the building……….that makes it part of the building’s structure. How small do you anticapate this ‘power center’ would be? Are you saying that it will probrably not be bulky enough to be considered an integral part of the building? If your talking about 60 wind turbines and a ‘huge solar panel’ stretching 60m above the shoulder of the building then I would regard that as sufficient to be included in the full building height – end of story. The building is either 180m high or it is not. Are you satisied with the render given Frank McDonald’s assertion this morning? The ‘energy center’ is not on that render as far as I can see.

    • #750405
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      and what are the two shafts going into the sky off the top of the building?

    • #750406
      darkman
      Participant

      With respect, they dont look like shafts to me and are far from bulky enough to carry 60 wind turbines and a solar panel in all honesty. I think it is just light beams drawn for effect.

      Simply the ‘battery’ at the top is not on the render so I fail to see how we can even judge the building until we see more renders.

    • #750407
      Morlan
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      Well from what I understand, the bridge across the Dodder will be a public transport corridor, so I assume buses travelling across the dodder, through the U2 tower, and on down the quays….

      That’s true, I forgot about that. Perhaps DCC will reserve right of way through the development. :-/

      I’m looking forward to seeing the master plans for this site.

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      and what are the two shafts going into the sky off the top of the building?

      CAD > Light Source > Exaggerate & Amplify.

    • #750408
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      I can considered that but i also assumed that maybe it was indicitive as in why mention it at all otherwise?

    • #750409
      darkman
      Participant

      This ‘battery’, as Frank McDonald describes it, IMO would change the look of this building significantly (60 metres high after all). Basically a liberty hall on top of the building in the render. I hope we get a render of it shortly as it would clear everything up.

      As an aside its very important that we know because there is an enourmous difference between 120 and 180m. 180 tall anything will have a significant impact on Dublin.

    • #750410
      Morlan
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      I can considered that but i also assumed that maybe it was indicitive as in why mention it at all otherwise?

      It’s a bit of a mystery alright. I honestly can’t invisage 50/60 metres of paraphernalia hanging off the top of the tower. They’ve deliberately left something out from the render.

    • #750411
      darkman
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      It’s a bit of a mystery alright. I honestly can’t invisage 50/60 metres of paraphernalia hanging off the top of the tower.

      Could not have put it better myself. I was thinking what wind turbines and a solar panel stretching for 60m would look like in the context of the structure and the mental image I have of it is not good. Would it be straightly vertical? It would have to be. It would change the look of the building significantly. I wonder does the fact they left it out tell us anything about the final product!?

    • #750412
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      hmm, not impressed with this at all – looks so evil :/

      The buildings adjacent to the tower are 7 stories so about ~30m high… from the render published i would suspect the height of the tower to be 180m at the level where both beams of light originate. I can’t see this ‘energy centre’ being a 60m addon to what is rendered – i would think it will be contained in the open area above the u2 studio, maybe the turbines are fixed to the horizontal structure shown at the top. Anyway, i guess everything will be cleared up soon enough, but that render certainly does not show a 120m structure (unless the scale is screwed, which i doubt).

      In fact, when i look at it again – is there some sort of turbine being shown (very vaguely) between the top of the egg and the horizontal structure (x marked above what may be its centre point)?

      Blah… i’d like to see the zaha hadid proposal

    • #750413
      SeamusOG
      Participant

      @Morlan wrote:

      That|s classic.:D Thank you Morlan / Bruce Wayne.

    • #750414
      SOC
      Participant

      Anyone else see this in yesterday’s Daily Mail? A little behind the times now, but interesting all the same!

      “It’s Bono the builder – Controversy as U2 are set to be revealed as docklands winners”, written by Andrea McCullagh.

      SEVEN years after it was first mooted, the U2 Tower, Ireland’s tallest skyscraper, will finally get the green light today – but not as we know it.

      Sources have revealed that the DDDA will finally bite the bullet and announce what has become the city’s worst-kept secret – that the megarich rock band have won the contract to build the tower that will bear their name.

      U2’s joint bid with developer Ballymore Properties, designed by Clarence Hotel architect Sir Norman Foster, is understood to have been chosen at a top-level DDDA meeting earlier this week.

      The Ballymre/U2 bid was one of a shortlist of five that also included Sean Dunne’s Mountbrook Homes and a joint venture between Sisk and Treasury Holdings. But the authority delayed the announcement until today, anticipating yet more controversy in a saga that has already had more than its share.

      For the success of the Ballymore/U2 venture means the authority has abandoned the daring twist design that it announced as the winner of a prestigious international prize in 2003.

      That stunning glass tower was designed by the Dublin architects, Burdon Craig Dunne Henry (BCDH), of which Felim Dunne, brother-in-law of U2 manager Paul McGuinness, is a senior partner.

      It is understood that BCDH will take its grievance to the High Court if it transpires the Ballymore U2 bid incorporates a new, Norman Foster design – a case that can only cause friction between the McGuinness family and the band members.

      Also believed to be heading to court is developer Sean Dunne, whose unsuccessful bid was based on the assumption that the authority was committed to the BCDH design.

      The saga started in 2001 when a compulsory purchase order was placed on U2’s Hanover Quay studio. The band negotiated a deal with the DDDA giving them the top storeys of whatever tower was built along with the naming rights.

      Yesterday a spokesman for Ballymore Properties was not available for comment and a spokesman for U2 also declined to comment on the issue – but all is likely to be revealed during the day.

    • #750415
      jdivision
      Participant

      That Dunne would probably take legal action (as well as some of the other bidders) and that the architects would too has been known for ages in fairness.

    • #750416
      ake
      Participant

      I see the Indo stole the title to this thread..

    • #750417
      shadow
      Participant

      Dump the whole thing, from the sublime (maybe this should be subprime) to the ridiculous.

      The wastage of time, effort, talent, the innuendo, the scandal, stacked juries, lost documentation, the awful designs…..

      How about running a proper fully international, properly organised and properly researched appropriate brief (rather than the anorexic one that was produced before or even the obese one we see now) with a proper secure and audited process of elimination.

      UIA perhaps….

      These selected (limited) competitions are certainly not getting anything better out of the so called “big boys” than you would see in open competition.

      The current design suffers from overarching belief in a simple form, the icon as building. The “sure” analogy has to go on a T-shirt. Maybe it is so that the DDDA and U2 can finally stop perspiring over this.

    • #750418
      cubix
      Participant

      So has anyone emailed the DDDA on height clarification and more renders?it would be a shame if they chopped 10 metres off it but at least it looks like finally going ahead.

    • #750419
      GregF
      Participant

      No mention of it yet on Foster & Partners website…………….
      http://www.fosterandpartners.com/Projects/ByLocation/Ireland.aspx

    • #750420
      Anonymous
      Participant

      I’m happy to see the back of the twisting effort, it was flawed from the start & lets face it, a rip off.

      This jobee looks interesting, but as always the devil is in the detail, of which there is very little. They could be proposing to clad it in egg cartons from what we’ve gotten so far.

      If the north facade is actually leaning, thats a very curious render, attempting to divert attention from what would surely be a primary feature ?

      We need views from up & down the quays and eh cut the crap with the perfect evening shite :rolleyes:

    • #750421
      htd2008
      Participant

      We’d like to get your opinion on something. We were entrants in the U2 Landmark Tower Competition
      a few years back when all the hullabaloo about the winning design, the winner’s relationship
      with the Client, etc. was at hand.

      I just read the other day that DDDA may tip Foster
      to ultimately do the new tower for U2/DDDA. This would not have been a shocker in any
      other circumstance, until I saw the image of the proposed scheme that looks (we believe)
      similar to ours. including the gesture at the entry with an ocular view to the rest of the harbor. Coincidence?

      Your thoughts…?

      [ATTACH]5987[/ATTACH][ATTACH]5988[/ATTACH]

    • #750422
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @htd2008 wrote:

      We’d like to get your opinion on something. We were entrants in the U2 Landmark Tower Competition
      a few years back when all the hullabaloo about the winning design, the winner’s relationship
      with the Client, etc. was at hand.

      I just read the other day that DDDA may tip Foster
      to ultimately do the new tower for U2/DDDA. This would not have been a shocker in any
      other circumstance, until I saw the image of the proposed scheme that looks (we believe)
      similar to ours. including the gesture at the entry with an ocular view to the rest of the harbor. Coincidence?

      Your thoughts…?

      Vaguely similar but hardly a total rip-off, foster’s looks better overall. Please don’t sue, this project has little enough chance of ever proceeding as it is 🙂

    • #750423
      Anonymous
      Participant

      obviously some similarities, but hard to judge from that proximity, any more renders ? not that we know a huge amount about fosters proposal either.

    • #750424
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      I asked for a statement on the height issue. This was the offical reply:

      The Norman Foster designed tower which has been selected for the provisional preferred bidder stage of the U2 tower competition is 130 metres above ground at its highest point. The first hundred metres of accommodation is residential and there is a public viewing gallery and egg-shaped U2 studio above that which brings the overall height up to 120 metres. There are a further ten metres of empty space that form the peak that the studio is suspended from This is shown in the image. These heights are the same as those of the reference design that the DDDA issued to all competitors.

      and further

      The architects have proposed an “energy centre” comprising wind turbines and solar panels that could rise to a point 50 metres above the top of the tower bringing the overall height to 180m but this was not considered in assessing the competition as it is outside the guideline heights. The architects have stated that the energy centre would enable the building to generate its own electricity and that it would substantially reduce the carbon footprint of the development. They estimate that the competition design will achieve a BREEAM* rating of “Very Good” but that if the Energy Centre could be added it would increase the BREEAM rating to “Excellent”
      which is the most environmentally sustainable rating possible.

      While the Docklands Authority will not consider any development space above a height of 120m above ground, it may consider the energy centre in due course subject to technical and planning criteria.

    • #750425
      darkman
      Participant

      Must be 130m then. (so why does the DDDA say 120m on its website). The lack of clarity with the entire project from start to finish has been a disgrace tbh. Easy to see why its hard to take anything the DDDA says seriously anymore. Did you refer to the ‘180m’ that was mentioned for the renewable energy thingy on top when you asked? Poor old Frank got it wrong. Obviously some bright spark at the DDDA told him 180m for the laugh. The incompetence is incredible really. 🙁

      To top it this is right in front of them in the Irish times. No clarification, nothing. You have to ask to get it.

    • #750426
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      Just re-posting part of my previous comment regarding the height issue:

      Re-reading the 2006 Amendment to the GCD Planning Scheme (http://www.dublindocklands.ie/files/…scheme06q4.pdf – it’s the same link as I posted above) I see the following (my emphasis):

      3.2.4 Building height
      Building heights within the blocks will vary in order to achieve appropriate
      urban scale. Maximum numbers of storeys are prescribed for both
      commercial and residential development as shown in Diagram 5. The
      controls will allow for vertically mixed use buildings with commercial,
      residential and other use storeys. The main element of the landmark tower
      should not exceed 100 metres in height to the shoulder above existing
      street level.
      The shoulder is the top of the front wall of the building,
      excluding any parapet. Accommodation above this level must be well set
      back and consistent with architectural and service elements. Such elements
      will be permitted subject to a maximum overall building height not
      exceeding 120 metres above existing street level.

      All of which makes the following highly suspect:

      The Norman Foster designed tower […] is 130 metres above ground at its highest point. […] There are a further ten metres of empty space [above the 120] that form the peak that the studio is suspended from. This is shown in the image. These heights are the same as those of the reference design that the DDDA issued to all competitors.

      What exactly is a ‘reference design’? Is this the original U2 tower?
      Did the DDDA revise the allowable height in the tender documentation?
      Did the DDDA revise the revised Grand Canal Dock Planning Scheme without telling or asking anyone?
      Does the DDDA know the meaning of the word ‘maximum’?

      To state it baldly: this proposal is not in keeping with the GCD Planning Scheme and beyond the provisions of a Section 25 Application.

      This saga, more than just about any other scheme/proposal in the Docklands, shows just how inept the DDDA has become, effectively re-writing the rules as it goes along to suit… to suit what? Or who?

      All I can do is echo shadow’s comments above, and reiterate previous comments of mine made elsewhere (here, for example) re the DDDA and its sell-by date- probably necessary in the mid-1990s, now an anachronism.

    • #750427
      PTB
      Participant

      ‘Ten meters of empty space that form the peak’?

      That dosn’t make sense.

    • #750428
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      Personally I’m disappointed to see the twisting tower won’t be built. I thought it looked fantastic. So there’s a few more around the world, so what? It still looked great. This new design just doesn’t compare. Crying shame. 🙁

    • #750429
      Morlan
      Participant

      My original montage was correct then :rolleyes: 🙂

    • #750430
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      do foster and partners have a dublin office?

    • #750431
      BTH
      Participant

      Yes, Fosters have an office above Habitat…

      Personally I really like the new scheme, much more distinctive and dynamic than the stumpy twisting tower. This will have real presence and will certainly put the deadly dull “watchtower” across the river to shame. Great to hear that the developers arent trying to squirm out of their responsibilities to provide social and affordable units – apparently 30 or more will be included in the development according to a story in this evening’s herald.

    • #750432
      darkman
      Participant

      @BTH wrote:

      Yes, Fosters have an office above Habitat…

      Personally I really like the new scheme, much more distinctive and dynamic than the stumpy twisting tower. This will have real presence and will certainly put the deadly dull “watchtower” across the river to shame. Great to hear that the developers arent trying to squirm out of their responsibilities to provide social and affordable units – apparently 30 or more will be included in the development according to a story in this evening’s herald.

      Harsh on the wathtower tbh. Renders can be misleading.

    • #750433
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @BTH wrote:

      Great to hear that the developers arent trying to squirm out of their responsibilities to provide social and affordable units – apparently 30 or more will be included in the development

      Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.

      It’s a condition of the GCD Planning Scheme that all developments must include the 20% S&A provision if they want to get Section 25 Approval, so I don’t think too much praise should be directed at the developers / architects in this case.

      What remains to be seen is whether the 20% S&A will remain when the authorities realise that the building is not compliant with the GCD PS- if they have to apply for regular PP owing to the height exceeding the maximum specified in the GCD PS (as I’ve argued they must), will they take it as an opportunity to quietly remove the 20%?

    • #750434
      vkid
      Participant

      Does anyone know what materials are being used for the bumpy textures on the side of the building. It could either look great or awful..depending on what is used. As has been said renders can be misleading and a night time view of this doesnt ive much detail. Its an ok design but will depend hugely on the materials used. It could look very out of place and out of scale if it is not done right..just curious..i won;t have to look at it every day but would hate to see something built for the sake of building a “skyscraper” for Dublin

    • #750435
      jdivision
      Participant

      cstephion wasn’t there an amendment to the GCD scheme last year that allowed increased height. As others have said, the 20 per cent was a requirement, no getting out of it. Watchtower looks awful in fairness but what’s being built is a massive improvement on the STW proposal.

    • #750436
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      jd-

      See my previous posts earlier in the thread on this subject- the amendment allowed for a building up to 100m to the ‘shoulder’, up to a maximum height of 120m.

      Also, I think the ‘others’ you refer to was me. 😉

      My first mention of the S&A matter: https://archiseek.com/content/showpost.php?p=72463&postcount=248

      My first mention of the height issue: https://archiseek.com/content/showpost.php?p=72466&postcount=249

      My restatement of the height issue: https://archiseek.com/content/showpost.php?p=72814&postcount=316

      I note also that, since I posted the last of those linked comments, Paul amended this post to include mention of the extra 50 metres. That info wasn’t there when I replied. It (the extra info, not Paul’s amendment) makes the whole thing even more farcical. Not that I’m surprised…

    • #750437
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Aha, so this energy centre thingy is not in the render we have I take it, 50 meters of windmills, sounds pretty wacky! Want to see a picture of it…

      But if they want to increase the height let them just apply for planning permission or amend their scheme (again), no need to get all hung up on it.

    • #750438
      theman
      Participant

      If there is any difficulties, they will amend the GCD scheme as this conveniently papers over the planning cracks. They have in fact done this already. DDDA will not under any circumstances open this project to even the remotest possibility of conventional planning and resultant 3rd Party appeals, An Taisce, high court actions etc. As long as they can make up the rules, and keep changing them accordingly, they will.

    • #750439
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      Yes, exactly.

      But it’s the fact that it’s been done already that concerns me. Makes a nonsense of the whole concept of a Planning Scheme, really, doesn’t it?

      @&quot wrote:

      As long as they can make up the rules, and keep changing them accordingly, they will.

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      effectively re-writing the rules as it goes along to suit… to suit what? Or who?

      Great minds… 😉

    • #750440
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Well the height that was set in the planning scheme was set because of the height they wanted to build at the time. Now they’ve changed their minds and they want to go bigger again, I say let them.

      There’s no point being too strict with disallowing amendments to the planning scheme: the worst outcome for the remainder of the docklands is if they DON’T amend it! – Otherwise we’re going to just get more of the same 6/7 storey boxes until all the available land is used up.

    • #750441
      Rory W
      Participant

      Don’t worry – if you don’t like this design another one will follow shortly

    • #750442
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @Rory W wrote:

      Don’t worry – if you don’t like this design another one will follow shortly

      lol

    • #750443
      aidanc
      Participant

      Most builders in the Docklands have been quite successful at removing the 20% social/affordable requirement by negotiating to build almost exclusively affordable to meet obligations. Affordable does not have the stigma attached that exists with social. DDDA is very happy to accomodate as they are very nervous about social.

    • #750444
      theman
      Participant

      As I said in a previous post, the DDDA were trying to direct the social and affordable into the Graving Docks development – this will be the most likely depository for this. They wouldn’;t want their precious facade festooned by tri-colours when Ireland are back playing at Lansdowne, or think of the various guises of santa clauses, raindeers abd all twinkly things festive that would festoon some of the apartments circa Christmas 2011….:) .

      It’s also amazing that the DDDA went to such great lengths to ensure the BCDH design remained within the boundary of the SJRQ road – this is afterall owned by DCC, not DDDA, and also has the LUAS / RPA to contend with. There may also be potential title issues with the properties directly above the road way. Looks good on an architect’s drawing board, but good old Irish red tape will soon scupper that.

      A bridge at the 7th floor from the BCDH U2 tower to the then MCA designed Britain Quay building was considered earlier but discounted for many of the reasons outlined above. How they change their tune when the starchitect rolls into town…..

    • #750445
      theman
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      But it’s the fact that it’s been done already that concerns me. Makes a nonsense of the whole concept of a Planning Scheme, really, doesn’t it?

      TBH, it’s not just through amending the planning scheme that they will get their own way – they have already used their influence to have the Watchtower redesigned, which would certainly be sailing close to the wind in terms of their planning remit. This, as well as the block on Liam Carroll’s development at the site adjacent to the U2 tower, was instigated by DDDA at the most senior level. So the goal posts will be changed and changed again to make sure they stay getting their way….

    • #750446
      darkman
      Participant

      Right, finally, ive dug deep and come up with something (every little helps) although the scale looks a little off:rolleyes: :

      I dont think that render truly reflects its height and scale though amd its obviously hastily put together and the detail is not there.

      http://vyonyx.com/index.php/clients/fp/u2-tower#more-1286

    • #750447
      Anonymous
      Participant

      Quite different from the original render – implying that it slenders down to nothing … quite like it, in fact it looks a lot better from that angle …

      It also suggests that the regular floor glazing pattern ends quite a way short of the top so I wonder does this render include the elusive ‘energy centre’, if so surely it is well underscaled, as said above.

    • #750448
      darkman
      Participant

      The render I posted is wrong obviously from a height perspective. They have squeezed about 30 floors into the height of Liberty hall so there is no way its a proper reflection of its height. I agree with you that that could be the idea for the energy center. Looks a little odd if its not. The difference with the energy center (if thats what its meant to be) actually looks to improve the general look of the building on that render,

    • #750449
      Morlan
      Participant

      The scale is completely off. Look at the 6 storey block to the right and then count the floors on the tower: 10.

      They must be trying to make it look smaller in the renders so that people don’t throw a fit.

      I’ve examined the render and scaled it up in Photoshop to match the surrounding buildings.

    • #750450
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      It’s really quite unattractive isn’t it – definitely not top Foster output

    • #750451
      Maskhadov
      Participant

      ugly imo

    • #750452
      Morlan
      Participant

    • #750453
      shadow
      Participant

      Does the “new” tower oversail Dublin City Council property – the River and as such does it not fall outside the DDDA juridiciton? At the very least there is a case for a thorough EIS study which encompasses the need to assess the impact from a wide area around the city. Remember the Spire/Spike/Needle embarrasment….

    • #750454
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Here’s a solution to all the problems: build all of the competition designs in a nice little cluster down there 😎

    • #750455
      darkman
      Participant

      I wonder what names the legendary dublin wit will give this if it is built?:rolleyes:

    • #750456
      LOB
      Participant

      U2’s The wedge

      Sorry

    • #750457
      JoePublic
      Participant

      The Irish Times has pictures of the Hadid and Vinoly proposals, Don’t think it’s on their website though.

    • #750458
      darkman
      Participant

      IT article:

      New U2 Tower may leave DDDA in a twist

      The fallout from the U2 Tower competition may include litigation by disappointed underbidders, writes Frank McDonald , Environment Editor

      IN ANY competition, there can only be one winner. But in the contest to build the U2 Tower in Dublin’s Docklands, the three losing consortiums feel very sore about the outcome – and not just because each of them invested at least €1 million in the effort to snatch this glittering prize.

      The decision earlier this month by the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) to award the project to Geranger Ltd, a consortium made up of Ballymore Properties, Paddy McKillen and the U2 rock group, was also seen as unfair by the disappointed underbidders – and there may be litigation over it.

      What the DDDA plumped for was a tilted triangular tower by Foster + Partners that would soar higher than the O’Connell Street Spire.

      Quite how much higher is still open to question, but it could ultimately rise to 180m (nearly 600ft), including a battery of vertical wind turbines and a huge solar panel above them.

      According to the authority, the Norman Foster-designed tower would be 130m above ground at its highest point. At the level of 100m, above the luxury apartments it would contain, there would be a public viewing gallery beneath the egg-shaped U2 studio, which is suspended in empty space from the pinnacle.

      “The architects have proposed an ‘energy centre’ comprising wind turbines and solar panels that could rise to a point 50m above the top of the tower, bringing the overall height to 180m,” the DDDA says. “But this was not considered in assessing the competition as it is outside the guideline heights”.

      Foster + Partners maintain that the renewable energy facility would enable the building to generate its own electricity, substantially reducing the scheme’s carbon footprint and making it more sustainable, while the DDDA says it “may consider the energy centre in due course subject to technical and planning criteria”.

      In the documentation issued to the four bidders – Geranger, the Riverside Partnership, Mountbrook Homes and Treasury Holdings/Sisk – the authority made it clear that its development objectives for the 1.87-acre site at Britain Quay included the U2 Tower and an adjoining building immediately to the south of it.

      It recalled that an earlier international architectural competition, held in 2003, resulted in the choice of “a stunning twisting tower design” by Blackrock-based BCDH Architects. This was to be a mere 60m high, but under an amendment made in 2006 to the Grand Canal Docks Planning Scheme this was raised to 120m.

      No reference was made to the debacle that mired the 2003 contest, in which – bizarrely – the original winner chosen by the jury couldn’t be identified because the number assigned to the entry could not be matched with a name. This led to a website being set up called “www.amithewinneroftheu2towercompetition.com”.

      Explaining its rationale for holding the latest competition, the DDDA’s documentation said BCDH’s original design had been “further refined” and the authority had also decided to combine the Britain Quay site with the U2 Tower site “to establish an attractive development context for the private development sector”.

      Bidders were requested to frame their bids based on the original (or “reference”) scheme. “However, it is important to note that the authority expects bidders to reappraise the internal layouts and construction and technical solutions suggested by the authority’s design team and develop their own solution on these issues.”

      It was a mandatory condition of the competition that bids would be based on the reference scheme; indeed, this was identified as a “design absolute”. But bidders were also offered the option of submitting an alternative, or “variant”, scheme based on the authority’s design and development objectives.

      These were outlined in the documentation provided, and bidders were also advised to read in full the Grand Canal Docks Planning Scheme (as amended) “to appreciate the authority’s intent” – not least because any development certified by the DDDA to be consistent with this scheme would be exempt from planning control.

      The amended planning scheme is quite specific about the U2 Tower. It says the main element of this landmark “should not exceed 100m in height to the shoulder above existing street level. Accommodation above this level should be well set back and consistent with architectural and service elements.

      “Such elements will be permitted subject to a maximum overall building height not exceeding 120m above existing street level,” it says, adding that “architectural features having non-useable floorspace above the maximum recommended heights will be considered on a case-by-case basis”.

      In the documentation issued to bidders, the DDDA noted that “the height of the tower up to its ‘shoulder’ is prescribed in the planning scheme”, and said the authority “is committed to the ‘twisted’ sculptural nature of the tower design” although it was asking bidders to reappraise its design in detail.

      This was intended to ensure “a coherent and sculptural relationship” between the tower and the adjoining building on Britain Quay. “The higher element of the Britain Quay building would need to be adjacent to the U2 Tower,” it said. The planning scheme also specified that this building would step down from the U2 Tower.

      However, in selecting the scheme by Foster + Partners, the DDDA abandoned its stated commitment to the “twisted” form of the tower and also the apparent requirement that the higher element of the Britain Quay building would be closer to the tower; in Foster’s scheme, it is further away while the tower has no “twist”.

      The two bidders who submitted only “reference” schemes – Mountbrook and Riverside – were wrong-footed as a result. Riverside’s “variant” scheme by Uruguayan starchitect Rafael Vinoly was not adjudicated upon – apparently after he had been told by the DDDA that it contravened the maximum height limits.

      According to one source, the basic problem that confronted bidders was the inherent difficulty of combining a twisting tower with a flanking building alongside – though Anthony Reddy and Associates and Danish architects 3XN achieved some unity in their “reference” schemes for Riverside and Mountbrook, respectively.

      The jury – Chris Wilkinson, of Wilkinson Eyre Architects; Shih-Fu Peng, of Heneghan Peng Architects, and Michael O’Doherty, former principal architect at the Office of Public Works – appears to have taken the view that the two “variant” schemes by Foster + Partners and deconstruction diva Zaha Hadid fitted the bill.

      Zaha, as everyone calls her, designed a scheme for Treasury-Sisk that had the imprint of a vertical motorway interchange, with a vast arch linking her tower to a flanking block on Britain Quay, creating an enormous undercroft that might not have been such a pleasant place, particularly at night. “It was a bit like Dubai,” one source said.

      In the end, it is understood that the jury gave Foster and Hadid equal ranking – either of them could have won, in other words. But architecture only counted for 45 per cent of the overall marks – the rest went to the financial offer made by bidders (40 per cent) and their resource commitments to the project (15 per cent).

      The DDDA’s documentation also specified that plant rooms were to be accommodated in a double-basement beneath the tower, as well as refuse storage and car-parking. Five of the six schemes submitted for adjudication had an energy centre at basement level; the sixth, by Foster, proposed putting it on the roof instead.

      According to the DDDA’s director of architecture, John McLaughlin, what gave it the edge was that its public spaces were “really well-handled”, providing a gateway to a new bridge over the River Dodder, where it joins the Liffey, springing from Britain Quay.

      However, it is impossible to say with any certainty why it really won.

    • #750459
      alonso
      Participant

      bono’s babel?

    • #750460
      theman
      Participant

      @shadow wrote:

      Does the “new” tower oversail Dublin City Council property – the River and as such does it not fall outside the DDDA juridiciton? At the very least there is a case for a thorough EIS study which encompasses the need to assess the impact from a wide area around the city. Remember the Spire/Spike/Needle embarrasment….

      Yes it does, DDDA engaged an EIS consultant on the BCDH tower, so I guess the same is needed on the new proposal. As I said in a previous post, they took great care to ensure the BCDH tower was properly framed so as not to oversail any one else’s property. Oversailing th river will also invoilve potential Foreshore Licences, again another body to deal with.

      A portion of SJRQ has to be purchased from Danninger – this is requried to realign the road to go under the tower. Not sure how receptive Liam Carroll may be to this request.

    • #750461
      Pepsi
      Participant

      i don’t really like this new proposal to be honest. they should have stuck with the twisting design. it looked way better.

    • #750462
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      I’ve seen one image of the zaha hadid proposal in todays irish times, and i think it looks quite interesting

    • #750463
      Morlan
      Participant

      @cokedrinker wrote:

      I’ve seen one image of the zaha hadid proposal in todays irish times, and i think it looks quite interesting

      Any pics?

    • #750464
      CC105
      Participant

      Based on those pictures in the Irish Times I think the DDDA may have called this one correctly, however the original tower proposal does look well in the Times. I wonder how difficult it would be to accomodate the twisting tower in another docklands location.It will be interesting to see how the green lobby etc plan on dealing with objections to the additional energy centre and also how if at all the DDDA deal with future tall buildings now that the height benchmark regardless of looks is circa 180m.

    • #750465
      notjim
      Participant

      As I understood it, that wasn’t the original tower in the times CC105, it was a redesign based on the original concept or some such.

      I thought the Hadid was very impressive I have to say.

    • #750466
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @CC105 wrote:

      I wonder how difficult it would be to accomodate the twisting tower in another docklands location.

      Yeah there’s nothing about the twisting tower design that makes it only suitable for that location (unlike foster’s which is pretty tailored for that particular site). The DDDA own the design I assume, could they use it elsewhere?

      I’d love to see it built where the Boland’s mill silos are opposite Alto Vetro, that land isn’t owned by the DDDA though of course.

      Or maybe there’s still time to spice up the watchtower with a twist 🙂

    • #750467
      darkman
      Participant

      http://vyonyx.com/index.php/clients/fp/u2-tower#more-1286

      hmmm thats the link I posted earlier. They seem to have got rid of the info now and the renders. :confused: A bit cloak and dagger is’nt it. God forbid anyone sees a different image of the proposal:rolleyes:

      Luckily Morlan was on hand to keep it for prosterity.

    • #750468
      Morlan
      Participant

      A telling sign that this thread is being watched.

    • #750469
      darkman
      Participant

      Yes, maybe best if you ditch you photoshop render;)

    • #750470
      cubix
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      Yeah there’s nothing about the twisting tower design that makes it only suitable for that location (unlike foster’s which is pretty tailored for that particular site). The DDDA own the design I assume, could they use it elsewhere?

      I’d love to see it built where the Boland’s mill silos are opposite Alto Vetro, that land isn’t owned by the DDDA though of course.

      Or maybe there’s still time to spice up the watchtower with a twist 🙂

      Yeah but the point behind the twisting tower was the fact that it wouldnt ignore the centre of Dublin like this one will.It directly faces the liffey-most people will only see the side of a building. The original design would of worked better..

    • #750471
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      I wonder what names the legendary dublin wit will give this if it is built?:rolleyes:

      The Tick.

    • #750472
      Morlan
      Participant

      DDDA – “See Our Shite Bay”

    • #750473
      GregF
      Participant

      kinda looks a bit gimmicky or cartoony….

      Right or wrong?

    • #750474
      darkman
      Participant

      Interesting to note that if this building was built to 180m it would be the tallest building in a city in these Islands outside London.

    • #750475
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Zaha’s proposal

      I like this – far more interesting than the Foster design

    • #750476
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Anthony Reddy Associates proposal

    • #750477
      Starch
      Participant

      ….as for Foster’s proposal…when the hell does dublin or any place look like that …. I wish architects would actually represent their ideas in reality ….

    • #750478
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Those schemes above are unadulterated shit.

      Both essays in empty formalism. They make foster’s scheme look considered.

      What, on gods green earth someone tell me is the pseudo-rational justifiaction of twisting a tower around?

    • #750479
      Anonymous
      Participant

      [Extract from Bord Pleanala’s Inspector’s Report on Ref. 124374- Summary of 3rd Party Appeal on behalf of U2’s Princus Trust against a neighbouring development proposal]
      The appeal from BDA, agent on behalf of Princus Investment Trust, owners of 30/32 Sir John Rogerson’s Quay can be summarised as follows. The excessive height of the proposed east elevation will undermine light levels to the existing building at 30/32 Sir John Rogerson’s Quay. Inadequate information has been submitted in relation to the proposed east elevation. Drawings fail to indicate the silhouette of nos. 30/32 as they will appear against the proposed six-storey gable. It is not acceptable that alterations to the proposed façade are to be dealt with by conditions attached to the planning permission. The proposed building in its height, mass, material and overall design fails to respect or address the context and scale of the existing buildings and permission should therefore, be refused.

      Planning Application Details
      Reg. Ref.: 3938/99
      Development: Mixed development of offices and 129 apartments, List 2 stone arch to former Marine School and associated site works at 28 –29 Sir John Rogerson’s Quay, 10 –13 Cardiff Lane, 10 Hanover St. East, Dublin 2.
      Applicant: Haytonvale Developments Ltd.
      Planning Authority Decision: Grant permission and refuse permission
      Appellant(s): Haytonvale Developments Ltd., Princus Investment Trust

    • #750480
      ake
      Participant

      Am I alone thinking such a huge building looks kind of ridiculous in the midst of the low docklands skyline? Will it not distract the eye from looking anywhere else ? If there were a few altro vetros nearby then we’d have some sort gradation at least.

    • #750481
      CC105
      Participant

      @ake wrote:

      Am I alone thinking such a huge building looks kind of ridiculous in the midst of the low docklands skyline? Will it not distract the eye from looking anywhere else ? If there were a few altro vetros nearby then we’d have some sort gradation at least.

      Nope I agree,all in favour of a tall building here but something needs to be built in between it and the other flat buildings along side it


      although it will probably look better viewed from near Altro Vetro


      can anybody put together a render of this new proposal combined with the refused Dunloe scheme on the next site, this was done with the twisting design.

    • #750482
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      @ake wrote:

      Will it not distract the eye from looking anywhere else ?

      With a bit of luck…:)

    • #750483
      darkman
      Participant

      I see no issue with height in terms of the surrounding structures. I mean, come on, we will never have more opportunity to do anything then now. I say go with Fosters proposal to 180m and make a statement on the skyline for once. This is a real opportunity. When Liberty Hall went up people were saying Ireland had entered a new age. Everyone was really excited. Thats Liberty Hall! Imagine what this tower would be like!:)

    • #750484
      shamrockmetro
      Participant

      build 2 of these you will get a star!

    • #750485
      Keen
      Participant

      I quite like it, but every time i see it i think “Sure – it won’t let you down” !! 🙂

    • #750486
      SOC
      Participant

      Frank McDonald’s piece in Thursday was excellent. Did anyone else see it? One by one he stipped away all the reasons the DDDA had given for selecting the Ballymore/U2 bid. Even though the DDDA had initiated the piece in an attempt to correct the earlier mistakes on height and energy centres, Frank wasn’t going to be used as a stool pigeon and duly took his revenge. Talk about eating the hand that feeds you.Having demolished the case in support of the Ballymore/U2 bid, unfortunately he stopped short of explaining why this bid has ended up being declared the ‘provisional’ preferred bidder. Expect more.

      From a very early stage in the competition process Ballymore/U2 have been assured of winning. And if you’re Ballymore/U2 and you know you’re going to win, what’s left to do but maximise your position. You do this by proposing a building that’s cheaper than the reference design (bottom drawer Foster) and then bidding less than anyone else for the exclusive right to build your design. It’s very simple: bid less, build cheaper. It’s a double whammy.

      And then you laugh all the way to the bank.

    • #750487
      theman
      Participant

      @SOC wrote:

      It’s very simple: bid less, build cheaper. It’s a double whammy.

      As well as making sure you entertain the CEO at every given opportunity, including trips to Manchester and London. The pre-qualification document from Ballymore was actually based around Pan Penninsula project, they didn’t demonstrate how they were going to build the tower in Docklands. And they still managed to get through. But I suppose a well aimed FOI request would reveal this.

    • #750488
      CC105
      Participant
      SOC wrote:
      Frank McDonald’s piece in Thursday was excellent. Did anyone else see it?

      Yes read it in full, some good points but like his recent article on Metro north he seems to be more critical than looking at any benefits for the city. Never any vision used on his part.
      This tower has dragged on for years, they need to build it ASAP and then we can all comment on it favourably or not.

    • #750489
      Mick
      Participant

      The Ballymore-U2 bid will never get beyond ‘provo’ status.

      One of the jurors, close to Urban Capital, is understood to be taking legal advice as he may be challenged in the forthcoming judicial review proceedings in relation to prejudicial remarks made during the assessment process.

      That rush you hear is the sound of people running for cover!

    • #750490
      SOC
      Participant

      This was in yesterday’s Sunday Business Post, written by Neil Callanan

      Winning bid for U2 tower is almost €30m under highest offer

      The winning consortium for the U2 tower is believed to have bid almost €30 million less for the site than the highest bid submitted. The Riverside 2 Partnership is understood to have bid about €75 million. The Geranger consortium which comprises Ballymore Properties, Paddy McKillen and U2 band members and management is believed to have bid a figure of slightly more than €70 million for the site.

      McKillen is believed to own only a small slice of Geranger, whose bid is said to have been a relatively straightforward cash offer.

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA), which ran the competition to select a developer of the tower and a new design (the third) for the building, said it could not comment on the price offered by Ballymore and its partners and how it matched up against other bids.

      “The tender process is ongoing,” said a spokeswoman.

      “This is commercially sensitive data which cannot be released at this time.”

      It is estimated that the U2 Tower scheme will cost over €200 million to design and build. Construction is expected to start in 2008 and be completed by 2011. The winning bid comprises a 120-metre tower with a hotel, shops and apartments designed by Foster + Partners.

      At the top of the tower will be a suspended egg-shaped pod which will house U2’s studios. So far, the DDDA has only released a night time render of the building. Night time images are notoriously difficult to judge a building’s quality by because, among other things, they don’t show the materials used or shadowing impacts.

      When asked why it has not released daytime renders, the DDDA said “that the release of images is a matter for the docklands authority. All images will be released at the end of the tender process.” However an alternative image of the design has been obtained by users of architectural discussion forum https://archiseek.com and posted on their website.

      The new tower design was described by the DDDA as “inspirational” and “one of the most significant architectural projects to be delivered in the regeneration of the Docklands area”. DDDAQ chief executive Paul Maloney said the “submission exceeded the expectations of the brief with the emergence of a breathtaking design uniquely suited to this prominent docklands site”.

      From certain angles, the tower bears a resemblance to Deutsche Bank Place, the bank’s headquarters at 126 Philips Street in Sydney in Australia, which was designed by the same architects.

      The losing members of the shortlist are believed to have met last week to discuss their options. They each spent at least €1 million, according to one well-placed source, and one of the bids cost as much as €2.5 million.

      When the shortlist of developers was announced, the DDDA’s press release omitted to mention U2’s involvement with Ballymore in the process. U2’s involvement with Geranger was, however, made known to all bidders prior to bidding, the DDDA spokeswoman said.

      It only became publicly known that U2 was involved with Ballymore when the authority’s legal representatives, A&L Goodbody, wrote to all the other bidders, stating that the band and its representatives had not had any role in drawing up the rules for the contest. That letter was then leaked to the media.

      To “underpin the independence” of the assessment process, the authority felt it necessary to appoint Chris Wilkinson of Wilkinson Eyre Architects, Shih-Fu Peng of Heneghan Peng Architects and Michael O’Doherty, former principal architect at the Office of Public Works, to advise it on the bids.

      They decided that the Foster design and Geranger bid was the best submission for the site.

    • #750491
      darkman
      Participant

      alternative image of the design has been obtained by users of architectural discussion forum

      hehe its gone now.

    • #750492
      jdivision
      Participant

      SOC’s article printed above is not the actual article. This is. SOC if you’re going to use media articles please reproduce in full and don’t alter it to make it incorrect.

      Winning bid for U2 tower is almost €30m under highest offer
      28 October 2007 By Neil Callanan
      The winning consortium for the U2 tower is believed to have bid almost €30 million less for the site than the highest bid submitted.

      The Riverside II Partnership is understood to have bid at least €100 million for the site, while Sean Dunne is understood to have bid about €75 million.

      The Geranger consortium which comprises Ballymore Properties, Paddy McKillen and U2 band members and management is believed to have bid a figure of slightly more than €70 million for the site. McKillen is believed to own only a small slice of Geranger, whose bid is said to have been a relatively straightforward cash offer.

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA), which ran the competition to select a developer of the tower and a new design (the third) for the building, said it could not comment on the price offered by Ballymore and its partners and how it matched up against other bids.

      ‘‘The tender process is ongoing,” said a spokeswoman.

      ‘‘This is commercially sensitive data which cannot be released at this time.”

      It is estimated that the U2 Tower scheme will cost over €200 million to design and build. Construction is expected to start in 2008 and be completed by 2011.The winning bid comprises a 120-metre tower with a hotel, shops and apartments designed by Foster + Partners.

      At the top of the tower will be a suspended egg-shaped pod which will house U2’s studios.

      So far, the DDDA has only released a night time render of the building. Night time images are notoriously difficult to judge a building’s quality by because, among other things, they don’t show the materials used or shadowing impacts.

      When asked why it has not released daytime renders, the DDDA said ‘‘that the release of images is a matter for the docklands authority. All images will be released at the end of the tender process.”

      However, an alternative image of the design has been obtained by users of architectural discussion forum https://archiseek.com and posted on their website.

      The new tower design was described by the DDDA as ‘‘inspirational’’ and ‘‘one of the most significant architectural projects to be delivered in the regeneration of the Docklands area’’.

      DDDA chief executive Paul Maloney said the ‘‘submission exceeded the expectations of the brief with the emergence of a breathtaking design uniquely suited to this prominent docklands site’’.

      From certain angles, the tower bears a resemblance to Deutsche Bank Place, the bank’s headquarters at 126 Philips Street in Sydney in Australia, which was designed by the same architects.

      The losing members of the shortlist are believed to have met last week to discuss their options. They each spent at least €1 million, according to one well-placed source, and one of the bids cost as much as €2.5 million.

      When the shortlist of developers was announced, the DDDA’s press release omitted to mention U2’s involvement with Ballymore in the process.

      U2’s involvement with Geranger was, however, made known to all bidders prior to bidding, the DDDA spokeswoman said.

      It only became publicly known that U2 was involved with Ballymore when the authority’s legal representatives, A &L Goodbody, wrote to the other bidders, stating that the band and its representatives had not had any role in drawing up the rules for the contest. That letter was then leaked to the media.

      To ‘‘underpin the independence’’ of the assessment process, the authority felt it necessary to appoint Chris Wilkinson of Wilkinson Eyre Architects, Shih-Fu Peng of Heneghan Peng Architects and Michael O’Doherty, former principal architect at the Office of Public Works, to advise it on the bids.

      They decided that the Foster design and the Geranger bid was the best submission for the site.

    • #750493
      darkman
      Participant

      Some of the media seem to be mixing up the Clarence hotel revamp and the U2 tower.

      http://www.designbuild-network.com/news/news2866.html

      Architects Slam Foster’s U2 Project

      24 October 2007 16:17

      The Foster + Partner’s design for U2 tower has met criticism online, according to online peer review site Archiseek, which found one third of surveyed members did not agree with the end design.

      The plans to redesign Dublin’s Clarence Hotel into Ireland’s tallest building should not be allowed to go ahead, architects say.

      The skyscraper will feature a skycatcher atrium that resembles spaceship that will be visible across the city.

      The Clarence Hotel is owned by Bono and The Edge of U2.

      Dublin City Council is looking into their application to demolish four neighbouring listed buildings to transform the site.

      By Penny Jones

      ‘Slammed’ might be a tad harsh. If anything I think that a minority of people here actually dislike Foster’s design. I think most of the problems are not with the design, but rather, the competition. Though I hope this project is held up no longer. I think its time to get on with it or we will be here in 2012 with a new design:rolleyes:

      The skyscraper will feature a skycatcher atrium that resembles spaceship that will be visible across the city.

      😀 She must be smoking something……surely….

    • #750494
      theman
      Participant
      darkman wrote:
      I think its time to get on with it or we will be here in 2012 with a new design:rolleyes:/

      Quote:
      Yeah, but the DDDA won’t – this is going down the road of the DDDA wasting €10m plus on three different designs, without a sod being turned and DDDA dissappearing into oblivion. The CEO will be happily back in DCC when all the fuss has blown over….
    • #750495
      igy
      Participant

      The plans to redesign Dublin’s Clarence Hotel into Ireland’s tallest building should not be allowed to go ahead, architects say.

      Buh…?

      @theman wrote:

      If anything I think that a minority of people here actually dislike Foster’s design. I think most of the problems are not with the design, but rather, the competition. Though I hope this project is held up no longer. I think its time to get on with it or we will be here in 2012 with a new design:rolleyes:

      Agreed, just build the damn thing already!

    • #750496
      -Donnacha-
      Participant
      darkman wrote:
      Some of the media seem to be mixing up the Clarence hotel revamp and the U2 tower. QUOTE]

      Weirdest twist yet…

    • #750497
      Blisterman
      Participant

      I wonder why they haven’t released any renders showing the tower from the west side, along the quays.
      I think it would look really good from that perspective.

      Still prefer the original twisting design.

    • #750498
      jdivision
      Participant

      I have one but file size is too big to upload.

    • #750499
      GregF
      Participant

      @AndrewP wrote:

      @darkman wrote:

      Some of the media seem to be mixing up the Clarence hotel revamp and the U2 tower. QUOTE]

      Weirdest twist yet…

      True,….Sky News had it on Monday night relaying across the bottom of the screen and kinda saying that conservation groups were concered for the listed buildings located beside the new U2 tower.

    • #750500
      theman
      Participant

      @theman wrote:

      @darkman wrote:

      I think its time to get on with it or we will be here in 2012 with a new design:rolleyes:

      Yeah, but the DDDA won’t – this is going down the road of the DDDA wasting €10m plus on three different designs, without a sod being turned and DDDA dissappearing into oblivion. The CEO will be happily back in DCC when all the fuss has blown over….

    • #750501
      lostexpectation
      Participant

      woah total confusion wonder who wrote it
      http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30100-1290655,00.html?f=rss

      edited to add

      David Norris says it looks one of those prepackaged sandwiches you’d buy in centra… 🙂

      so this new image still has these vague lines, where did the image with the solid extension above the peak of the building come from

      Penny jones cribbing Larissa Nolan cribbing archseek…

    • #750502
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      image and a detail from it…..
      doesn’t show much more that we can make out from the other renders

      courtesy of The Sunday Business Post

    • #750503
      jdivision
      Participant

      @lostexpectation wrote:

      woah total confusion wonder who wrote it
      http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30100-1290655,00.html?f=rss

      I don’t think it is. I think they’re talking separately about the two projects. The sentence structure isn’t great though

    • #750504
      damnedarchitect
      Participant

      Methinks it needs to go to 180m.

      Methinks it will.

      🙂

    • #750505
      Urban_Form
      Participant

      More fotos of the Zaha Hadid design – far more dramatic in my opinion

    • #750506
      cubix
      Participant

      Zaha Hadids design is perhaps the ugliest skyscraper ive ever seen,it amazes me how its even a topic of discussion. BTW those renders look pretty good!now all we need is someone to photoshop in the watchtower??any takers

    • #750507
      GrahamH
      Participant

      Have to say I’m really not a fan of Foster’s design for this particular site. It doesn’t address its location properly: presenting a gable wall to the city, while its principal elevation is so narrow as to be at odds with the vast horizontal expanse of the Liffey. It’s as if it’s addressing or pointing to a specific point on the river – by virtue of its leaning character and its narrow main facade – and yet when you get down there, there’s, well, nothing.

      This critical corner site is more suited to a proud, upstanding, elegant statement that’s more outward looking; something that addresses the city at large as well as the corner site in question. It needs to be more all-encompassing, more democratic in appearance than what is proposed. What we have is rather self-absorbed – not necessarily a bad thing – but given this is to be the defining building of the Docklands to which all future towers are supposed to bow in deference, I’m not sure we have the right building. This design is more along the lines of one of those very smaller towers that wants to make a bit of a statement with a quirky shape, not the flagship that should be addressing the entire area.

      Does it not grate with anyone that a corner site is being filled with what is anything but a corner building? Personally I find it very jarring.

    • #750508
      BTH
      Participant

      My god – that Hadid proposal is shockingly bad to my eyes, lumpy, bulky and completely lacking in elegance… Then again I think the Foster proposal is great! No accounting for taste eh?Actually I have one qualm – I think it would be better if it wasn’t leaning outwards towards the river, instead rising straight upwards – as Graham says it gives it a directionality as if it’s leaning to acknowlege or point towards something – which it isn’t. I actually disagree that the building is presenting it’s “gables” to the city – to me the main elevations are the sculptural ones with the potentially very interesting cladding design….

    • #750509
      shamrockmetro
      Participant

      if zaha was stainless steel it might work…

      but some of zaha’s previous projects are not so impressive and she started by painting?

      I admire her line work style but it does not always translate… It only works on some projects

      It’s clear from this that foster had the most skilled 3d modeler / presentation / context photo and is a massive cut above the rest…

      If I was a judge I would almost know it was foster because of the same style used for the clarence night shot

      I would like to see the same artist do zaha’s as well then we could compare them fairly…

    • #750510
      CC105
      Participant

      Graham H

      Future towers, stop dreaming! compared to IFSC II and other DDDA projects this is top quality stuff, hopefully once built it will finally end the highrise phobia. Agreed the building could do more to face the city but hopefully the new city will be built up around it.

    • #750511
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      @CC105 wrote:

      Agreed the building could do more to face the city but hopefully the new city will be built up around it.

      How? They’ve largely just rebuilt the entire area.

    • #750512
      CC105
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      How? They’ve largely just rebuilt the entire area.

      Hopefully when Spencer Dock is finished and the other plots between it and the remodelled Point Depot are
      built on, the U2 tower will be more joined up with the city.
      Now I am dreaming but if that highrise island mooted a while back was built and the port moved then who knows.

    • #750513
      DJM
      Participant

      Sweet Jesus!!! Zaha Hadid’s design is absolutely horiffic. Hawkins House MkII for the 21st century. Absolutely love Foster’s design though. Top marks 🙂

    • #750514
      ake
      Participant

      anyone else have a problem with the crookedness? you can’t see the other part from practically anywhere but the east link bridge.

    • #750515
      massamann
      Participant

      My opinions on the two designs are switching. Seeing these latest renders, the Leaning Tower aspect of the Foster design becomes much more obvious. And I’m not sure that it works. It’s not counterbalanced by anything; it doesn’t interact with anything. It looks like it’s about to topple into the river, like a drunk stepping off a curb.

      On the other hand, the Hadid renders look far more dynamic than I had originally thought. The ratio of the tower is still a little deep for my liking, and the colours chosen a little too grey, but it certainly is iconic (for good or bad).

      Now though, like practically everybody else in this thread, I just want them to get on and build something. We’ve had our talks, we’ve had our competitions, there’s no right or wrong answer. Just get on with it….

    • #750516
      ForzaIrlanda
      Participant

      I have to say I’m glad that Hadid’s design wasn’t chosen. It’s really weird looking. And that bit that slinks along and joins up with the tower element of the building looks stupid the way it juts out over the road/river ( I dont know how far out it goes).

    • #750517
      Anonymous
      Participant

      have to take back my initial comments on Hadid’s proposal based on the original render …

      Quite like it from the top left shot –

      Still overall though, a lot of bulk & brawn from many angles & I don’t think it has the height to carry it off.

      Good to see fosters from down the quays,

      I’m convinced it needs to rise to its pinacle @ 180m to work.

    • #750518
      Urban_Form
      Participant

      Here’s some more

    • #750519
      massamann
      Participant

      You’re killing me here…. 🙁

    • #750520
      BTH
      Participant

      Great renders but the buildings not getting any better looking…

    • #750521
      cokedrinker
      Participant

      the images of the hadid proposal are of terrible quality… are they photographs of newspaper images?
      I like the view of the tower from the point theatre… the physical model in the bottom right of the last images is nice… but the horizontal element does kind of ruin it

    • #750522
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      @ake wrote:

      anyone else have a problem with the crookedness? you can’t see the other part from practically anywhere but the east link bridge.

      It’s like a picture that hasn’t been hung properly… I find myself tilting my head to one side as I look at it. And as people have said, there’s no visual counterpoint to it. Not sure if the poker-straight watchtower on the other side will make this better or worse.
      Has the DDDA actually sat down with a render of how both will look alongside each other? Does such an image even exist?
      I like it apart from the tilt, though. Hate the Hadid.

    • #750523
      PTB
      Participant

      Has anyone pictures of the Vinoloy Propsal?

      And does anyone know what the fuck is the glittery glitzy finish on the outside of the building?

    • #750524
      jdivision
      Participant

      There was one in Irish Times. Only one I’ve seen

    • #750525
      vkid
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      image and a detail from it…..
      doesn’t show much more that we can make out from the other renders

      courtesy of The Sunday Business Post

      every time i look at those images it looks more and more like the tail of aircraft heading away from the city. 😀
      or a pre-packed sandwich from centra

    • #750526
      SOC
      Participant

      For those pedantic members who take exception to the odd typo in my last posting, please note that this article is directly from today’s Sunday Tribune.

      Commercial

      The Drawing Board
      Garry Miley

      Print version Email to a friend

      THE Dublin Docklands Development Authority was established in 1997 to plan the urban-renewal of the vast, derelict area of Dublin’s old port.

      Because the government recognised that our unsophisticated planning system would prevent anything from being built in the Docklands area ever, they came up with a new system where applications for development within the area could bypass the usual localauthority application/objections/Bord Pleanala route.

      The DDDA planning system could hardly have been more different from the one which applied (and more or less still applies) to the rest of the country. The way things work within the DDDA area is that planning approvals are really just a matter of routine, provided the proposal doesn’t stray outside the terms of an overall master plan.

      The DDDA planning system . . . copied from approaches found abroad . . . wasn’t refined enough. So this is what happened: in 2002, an architectural competition was held by the DDDA to design a new skyscraper . . . the U2 Tower . . . for a prominent site within its area. A winner was selected. But by 2005 everyone realised the winning scheme was too small to be economically feasible. So the building was redesigned to the point that, when finally built, it would be the tallest occupied structure in Ireland.

      Because the bewildering planning process that applies to you, me and everyone else in Ireland doesn’t apply to the area within the Docklands, the tower redesign was approved with the minimum fuss. No protracted Bord Pleanala hearings, no Prime Time Investigates.

      At the start of this year the DDDA invited developers to tender on the approved, enlarged building. But on 12 October, when the ‘provisional’ winner of the tender competition was announced, the design of the building had, somehow, mysteriously, completely and utterly changed.

      Instead of the design-competitionwinning-but-enlarged proposal which had been approved by the nodding of a few DDDA heads in 2006, we were now to have a totally different building which no one had ever seen before. A Norman Foster. In making the announcement for the radically changed design, the DDDA . . . knowing they wouldn’t be hindered by planning setbacks . . . predicted the Foster Tower would be completed by 2011.

      Now, since the 12 October announcement of the ‘provisional’ winner, newspaper and internet chatter has focused on the kind of business-page minutiae which only investment portfolio anoraks really care about: will sore-losing developer X sue the DDDA over some possible breach of fine print/conflict of interest/competition regulations? Or will X hold their whisht in the hope of having a crack at some new money printing project the DDDA have up their sleeves for further along the river?

      What I can’t understand is why the media, the opposition parties, the local community and everyone else whose been following the game has managed to avoid asking the central question, which is: how can it be, in a country where the average citizen can spend years of their life waiting for An Bord Pleanala to refuse planning permission for an inconsequential house extension, that the emirate of the Dublin Docklands can publicly present the soon to be tallest building in the state . . . a below-par McFoster . . . as a fait accompli through some shoddy, press-leaked 3-D images?

      Am I the only one who thinks this is strange?

    • #750527
      Mick
      Participant

      [img]sydneyqk9.th.jpg

      Spot the difference!

      I wonder if anyone in the Ballymore/U2 team realised that they were being sold a second hand pup?

      Foster’s design for Deutsche Bank in Sydney is ten years old. Did no-one at the DDDA or any one of the eminent architects on the judging panel notice the remarkable similarity?

      Hardly the breath-taking innovative design we were told we were getting, more a case of here’s one I prepared earlier.

    • #750528
      jdivision
      Participant

      @SOC wrote:

      For those pedantic members who take exception to the odd typo in my last posting,

      Hold on a second. You changed the copy to say that Riverside II had bid e75 million when in fact they had bid more than e100 million. That’s not being pedantic and it’s a lot more than a typo. You changed the copy and made it incorrect.

    • #750529
      CC105
      Participant

      Have to wonder why the government does not use section 25 or similar status for critical infrastructure, off thread here but lots of critical comment on infrastructure in the Sunday Business Post today.

    • #750530
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @jdivision wrote:

      I don’t think it is. I think they’re talking separately about the two projects. The sentence structure isn’t great though

      Sky News and sentence structure?

      My favourite mistake in recent times was when a press conference was organised regarding plans to clone embryos- the scrolling bar initially said: Cloned embryo plans news conference shortly, subsequently amended to read: Cloned embryo plans: news conference shortly.

      😀

    • #750531
      fergalr
      Participant

      Em…this looks a little similar.

    • #750532
      fergalr
      Participant


      Hancock Centre anyone?

    • #750533
      trace
      Participant

      Foster in firing line over U2 Tower…
      Published on http://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/news/dailynews/foster_in_firing_line_over_u2_tower.html
      02 November 2007 11:46 Author: Richard Waite

      The never-ending controversy surrounding the proposed U2 tower in Dublin has taken yet another twist after conservationists warned of potential legal action over the latest plans by Foster + Partners. An Taisce, the National Trust of Ireland, said it had ‘serious concerns about the behind-the-scenes process’ adopted by landowner Dublin Docklands Development Agency (DDDA), which picked the 120m-tall scheme by Foster following a developer-led contest last month. The trust is claiming that neither itself nor the public has been consulted on the new tower, and that it has not seen any environmental impact assessment reports – even though the scheme could have a detrimental impact on a key Georgian area of the city and is 40m-taller than previous ditched proposals by Dublin-based Craig Henry Architects and Burdon Dunne Architects. Such reports had been supplied to support the DDDA’s original masterplan for the area, however a trust spokesman told the AJ he feared the ‘dramatically different’ proposals could be given the go-ahead without either renewed consultation or a revised environmental statement, because of the authority’s special planning powers. The trust did not rule out instigating legal proceedings to force the DDDA to carry out a new environmental report which could hold up the development, backed by Ballymore Properties. Ian Ritchie’s Spire on the other side of the city was similarly delayed to allow for a full environmental impact assessment.

      An Taisce’s heritage officer Ian Lumley said: ‘We were taken completely by surprise by this dramatically different scheme. We are not getting the information and the city is being kept in the dark. We welcome the likes of Foster but there is a right way to do things and there has been a lack of explanation of the legal process.’ He added: ‘We were happy with height of the previous scheme, but we see this as deviating from the DDDA’s original masterplan and so these proposals must be subject to an environmental impact assessment.’

      However a spokesman for the DDDA rubbished the claims, saying: ‘The development of the Docklands masterplan and the planning schemes included extensive consultation and the public and local residents had plenty of opportunity for involvement in the process. ‘There was a full Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) report on the U2 Tower conducted as part of the recent amendment to the Planning Scheme for the Grand Canal Dock area. This was made available during the public consultation process and was submitted with the amended Planning Scheme by the Docklands Authority to the Minister for approval under Section 25 of the Dublin Docklands Act 1997.’

    • #750534
      paul h
      Participant

      @fergalr wrote:


      Hancock Centre anyone?

      You are not actually comparing u2 building to the john hancock building in Chicago??
      Stay off the drugs mate
      Its one thing for it to be compared to his previous design in Sydney as it is vaguely similar

      Poor effort jumping on the bandwagon ‘knocking the successful person’

      [ATTACH]6219[/ATTACH]

    • #750535
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @Mick wrote:

      [img]sydneyqk9.th.jpg

      Spot the difference!

      I wonder if anyone in the Ballymore/U2 team realised that they were being sold a second hand pup?

      Foster’s design for Deutsche Bank in Sydney is ten years old. Did no-one at the DDDA or any one of the eminent architects on the judging panel notice the remarkable similarity?

      Hardly the breath-taking innovative design we were told we were getting, more a case of here’s one I prepared earlier.

      You know you’d swear every other building built in Dublin in modern times were complete originals, architectual masterpieces, and here was Foster daring to come here and fob this unoriginal on us. Yes both buildings are skyscrapers. Yes they have a similar angle on the roof. Yes both buildings are by the same architect.

      Woopdeefeeckindoo

      Not to mention how you doctored the image to straighten the U2 tower – you forgot the shadow mind.

    • #750536
      paul h
      Participant

      @Mick wrote:

      [img]sydneyqk9.th.jpg

      Spot the difference!

      I wonder if anyone in the Ballymore/U2 team realised that they were being sold a second hand pup?

      Foster’s design for Deutsche Bank in Sydney is ten years old. Did no-one at the DDDA or any one of the eminent architects on the judging panel notice the remarkable similarity?

      Hardly the breath-taking innovative design we were told we were getting, more a case of here’s one I prepared earlier.

      Pathetic, and if you did doctor the the image then doubly so
      Does this type of crap make people feel big or clever? because i dont understand it, to me you look small and petty, not you mick in particular , but anyone who pulls this spot the difference shite
      Its a fantastic looking building, the ddda chose it, now build it
      And everyone else get over yourselves

      It is tiresome but very true that success breeds enemies
      and the fact that this is a foster design AND a high rise building is too much for some people to stomach and that is the sad fact

      This whole ‘controversy’ is so predictable, is there anyone out there that didnt see this coming?
      And dont tell me the ddda didnt follow some guideline parameters, SO WHAT , sometimes life just isn’t fair:D

    • #750537
      darkman
      Participant

      @paul h wrote:

      Pathetic, and if you did doctor the the image then doubly so
      Does this type of crap make people feel big or clever? because i dont understand it, to me you look small and petty, not you mick in particular , but anyone who pulls this spot the difference shite
      Its a fantastic looking building, the ddda chose it, now build it
      And everyone else get over yourselves

      It is tiresome but very true that success breeds enemies
      and the fact that this is a foster design AND a high rise building is too much for some people to stomach and that is the sad fact

      This whole ‘controversy’ is so predictable, is there anyone out there that didnt see this coming?
      And dont tell me the ddda didnt follow some guideline parameters, SO WHAT , sometimes life just isn’t fair:D

      I agree………also who did not predict an Taisce would stick their grubby noses in too, no doubt, to launch yet another idiotic complaint against a major project in the courts (and the taxpayer will pay for it of course):rolleyes:

    • #750538
      vkid
      Participant

      i dont know how anyone can conclude that this is a great design from the images seen so far. I kind of like it in many ways but i kind of also think it will look like a giant heap of crap in a few years time..it really all depends on the finer details..none of which anyone can tell from the images released to date.
      In a city which is predominantly lo-rise it quite possibly could turn out to be the most dominant heap of junk you will see anywhere.Tall does not automatically mean great design and some people just want it built so that Dublin can have a tall building..plenty of “just build it already ” comments and that would be a serious mistake imo. In a city like New York or maybe even London you might get away with it but in Dublin if its poor it will stick out like a very big sore thumb on a very small hand

    • #750539
      manifesta
      Participant

      less like a sore thumb and more like a middle finger

    • #750540
      cubix
      Participant

      Maybe we should start a “U2 tower rant thread” for all the moaners. If you pick out nearly any skyscraper in the world and look hard enough one will pop up thats similar in some way, Architecture itself is becoming more globalized unfortunately. As for an taisce its sad enough that this organisation is even taken seriously in this country.

    • #750541
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @cubix wrote:

      As for an taisce its sad enough that this organisation is even taken seriously in this country.

      It’s very important we have an organisation looking out for our heritage (where were an taisce when Dunnes Stores/DCC were knocking part of an intact 1920s terrace on Henry street?).

      But they lose credibility in my mind when they oppose and attempt to further delay a development like this for spurious reasons.

      And as for buildings looking similar to each other, I have discovered that the GPO, the Custom’s house, the old Parliament on College Green AND the Four Courts are suspiciously similar: we better demolish three of them before the rest of the world finds out.

    • #750542
      Urban_Form
      Participant

      It’s very important we have an organisation looking out for our heritage (where were an taisce when Dunnes Stores/DCC were knocking part of an intact 1920s terrace on Henry street?).

      An Taisce serve an important role as you say. It’s only too bad that their public funding was seriously reduced a number of years ago because they were perceived as being too effective in fulfilling that role.

    • #750543
      Hiivaladan
      Participant

      Funny how we’ve become so inured to originality that a little resemblance is enough to enrage us. Remember the 50s,60s and 70s when cities were full of the same old office buildings straight of the old-as the Americans would say-Cookie Cutter.

    • #750544
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @cubix wrote:

      As for an taisce its sad enough that this organisation is even taken seriously in this country.

      Why?

    • #750545
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      I agree………also who did not predict an Taisce would stick their grubby noses in too, no doubt, to launch yet another idiotic complaint against a major project in the courts (and the taxpayer will pay for it of course):rolleyes:

      Your post is so misinformed as to be laughable. What do you mean by ‘yet another idiotic complaint… in the courts’? Let me ask you, how many ‘idiotic complaints’ are you aware of An Taisce having taken to the courts with the associated expense to the taxpayer? A simple list will suffice, thanks; even one for, say, the last 10 years.

    • #750546
      jimg
      Participant

      As for an taisce its sad enough that this organisation is even taken seriously in this country.

      Most other countries have national heritage organisations who have input into the development process and most are taken seriously indeed.

      Ireland is the only country I know of where it’s seen as fashionable, witty or clever to blindly follow the ignorant outbursts of gombeen local councillers and grubby vested interests and vilify the only statutary organisation in the country which has any regard for our built heritage. I know I’m going to insult you but casual An Taisce bashing is a sure indicator of ignorance in this country. I’ve never heard anyone present an informed case against An Taisce with real examples of it’s unreasonable interferance with development. Yet I’ve heard countless people, sometimes usually intelligent, casually denigrate An Taisce. If ever challenged, they express mild surprise and assume it’s taken for granted but never manage anything more convincing than vague muttering about tree huggers or D4 types before tailing off into silence.

      In this case, An Taisce have explicitly said they do not have a problem with the height of the building but are raising questions about the process the DDDA have used. They are not a lonely voice in this – all the recent newspaper articles have raised this as an issue so I don’t know what is so unreasonable about their input.

      Please put up or shut up when it comes to An Taisce bashing.

    • #750547
      cubix
      Participant

      An Taisce have explicitly said they do not have a problem with the height of the building.
      And you take their word for it,you obviously dont know how these organisations work.your naivety is pathetic. If an taisce got there way we would have no 21st century architecture in our capital,

    • #750548
      paul h
      Participant

      @jimg wrote:

      Most other countries have national heritage organisations who have input into the development process and most are taken seriously indeed.

      Ireland is the only country I know of where it’s seen as fashionable, witty or clever to blindly follow the ignorant outbursts of gombeen local councillers and grubby vested interests and vilify the only statutary organisation in the country which has any regard for our built heritage. I know I’m going to insult you but casual An Taisce bashing is a sure indicator of ignorance in this country. I’ve never heard anyone present an informed case against An Taisce with real examples of it’s unreasonable interferance with development. Yet I’ve heard countless people, sometimes usually intelligent, casually denigrate An Taisce. If ever challenged, they express mild surprise and assume it’s taken for granted but never manage anything more convincing than vague muttering about tree huggers or D4 types before tailing off into silence.

      In this case, An Taisce have explicitly said they do not have a problem with the height of the building but are raising questions about the process the DDDA have used. They are not a lonely voice in this – all the recent newspaper articles have raised this as an issue so I don’t know what is so unreasonable about their input.

      Please put up or shut up when it comes to An Taisce bashing.

      Im sure you are correct and conservation of our heritage is no doubt of the highest importance
      But as i was reading that it occured to me you could replace ‘an taisce’ with ‘high rise’ and it could also be a fairly accurate statement
      It is quite obvious that no one could, on any rational grounds, object to the height of the proposed building in this particular location, so objectors must attack from a different angle.
      What a puke inducing angle it is, questions about the process?? come on , get a life people
      But alas it is so petty that it may actually stick and no doubt will delay the inevitable for another year or so

      Do the anti high rise brigade ever feel like they are pissing into the wind?

    • #750549
      Urban_Form
      Participant

      Anyone who is a regular reader of this forum knows the number of threads dedicated to the rants about the destruction of of various aspects of Dublin and the wider country. If anyone here with a solely An Taisce bashing agenda cannot see the disconnect between such discussions on this forum and the purpose they serve, or the purpose they would better serve with greater Government intervention, then this aspect of the conversation on this particular thread is fairly pointless to begin with.

    • #750550
      darkman
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      Your post is so misinformed as to be laughable. What do you mean by ‘yet another idiotic complaint… in the courts’? Let me ask you, how many ‘idiotic complaints’ are you aware of An Taisce having taken to the courts with the associated expense to the taxpayer? A simple list will suffice, thanks; even one for, say, the last 10 years.

      Some noticable ones:

      The M7 motorway
      The M4 motorway
      The M50 motorway
      The M11 motorway
      The M3 motorway
      The M1 motorway particularly at Lissenhall – they thought the Swans would die this time.
      Every single motorway ever built here was objected to by An Taisce
      Dublin Port Tunnel
      Spencer Dock development
      Intel expansion at Liexlip – now that was unbelieveable! – only 5000 people work there!
      I could go on and on and on – and there only some of the ones I remember off the top of my head.

      Should I go on?

    • #750551
      CC105
      Participant

      Spot on Darkman, you can add nearly every building they deem highrise in Dublin over the past decade or more, current article from todays IT as an example of all that is wrong with them.
      Didnt the wide streets involve dramatic change – would they have objected to that project?

      Plan for former ESB shop in Temple Bar criticised
      An Taisce has criticised a proposal to redevelop the former ESB showrooms at the entrance to Temple Bar on Fleet Street, Dublin 2, saying the design is trying to cram-in too many floors and is out of scale in an area of great historic sensitivity.
      The building adjoins Westmoreland Street to the east “which is part of the great north/south Georgian axis developed around 1800 by the Wide Streets Commissioners”.
      Aztec Properties, controlled by Wexford-based Stafford Holdings, bought the 1960s building for €33 million and plans to demolish it for a six-storey block with two further storeys set back. An Taisce says the height is “over and above” the five-storey scale of Westmoreland Street and, while Fleet Street has larger structures at its eastern end (“notably the leaden 1990s Fleet Street multi-storey car park”), the planned building is of greater scale than anything in the immediate area. If it goes ahead the development would have 1,313sq m (14,133sq ft) of retail space at street level and a further 1,299sq m (13,982sq ft) in the upper basement.
      Office space on floors one to seven will extend to 8,188sq m (88,135sq ft). The Fleet Street premises was one of a small number of ESB buildings excluded from the sale of its retail network to Bank of Scotland (Ireland).
      © 2007 The Irish Times

    • #750552
      paul h
      Participant

      I thought the dda was commisioned to avoid the inevitable, endless , unproductive planning hurdles??


      Also i was wondering why was a new thread about this same topic created today?
      Seems kind of suspect to me:)

    • #750553
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      Some noticable ones:

      The M7 motorway
      The M4 motorway
      The M50 motorway
      The M11 motorway
      The M3 motorway
      The M1 motorway particularly at Lissenhall – they thought the Swans would die this time.
      Every single motorway ever built here was objected to by An Taisce
      Dublin Port Tunnel
      Spencer Dock development
      Intel expansion at Liexlip – now that was unbelieveable! – only 5000 people work there!
      I could go on and on and on – and there only some of the ones I remember off the top of my head.

      Should I go on?

      I’ll repeat my question, as you appear to have misunderstood me. Whether by design or through simple ignorance, I wouldn’t presume to guess.

      How many ‘idiotic complaints’ are you aware of An Taisce having taken to the courts with the associated expense to the taxpayer?

      Some of the cases you listed above certainly went to the courts, but I don’t think they all did. And of those that did, are you certain that An Taisce was the instigator of the legal proceedings? Furthermore, I don’t see you mentioning any examples where the case was successful. But I suppose that doesn’t bolster your argument. Also, it’s very telling that you seem to be focussing primarily on motorway and other road schemes.

      Of course, I might be wrong. Perhaps An Taisce did take all of those cases to the courts and lose. Any chance you could provide links to the judgements from the relevant courts? That’d be a great help, thanks.

      Also, thanks for answering. While we seem to disagree fundamentally on this issue (or at least seem to have a different understanding of the facts – or even what constitutes a ‘fact’ in the first instance), at least you responded, which is more than can be said for cubix up there whose tactic seemed to be to blithely ignore my simple (what’s more simple than a single-word question?) request for a bit of substance to back up his sweeping generalisation.

      Lastly, please don’t presume to speak for all taxpayers. You do not.

      (As an aside: is there anyone left who knows the difference between their, there and they’re any more?

    • #750554
      Daragh
      Participant

      As an aside: is there anyone left who knows the difference between their, there and they’re any more?

      Nope. I don’t think so!

    • #750555
      massamann
      Participant

      Some may say that this is off-topic, but while I’m up to speed with the their-there-they’re dilemma, I’ve never been confident of the use of apostrophes e.g. it’s / its’.

      Maybe we could campaign for a linguistic An Taisce, dedicated to preserving the traditions of our language…

    • #750556
      darkman
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      I’ll repeat my question, as you appear to have misunderstood me. Whether by design or through simple ignorance, I wouldn’t presume to guess.

      How many ‘idiotic complaints’ are you aware of An Taisce having taken to the courts with the associated expense to the taxpayer?

      Some of the cases you listed above certainly went to the courts, but I don’t think they all did. And of those that did, are you certain that An Taisce was the instigator of the legal proceedings? Furthermore, I don’t see you mentioning any examples where the case was successful. But I suppose that doesn’t bolster your argument. Also, it’s very telling that you seem to be focussing primarily on motorway and other road schemes.

      Of course, I might be wrong. Perhaps An Taisce did take all of those cases to the courts and lose. Any chance you could provide links to the judgements from the relevant courts? That’d be a great help, thanks.

      Also, thanks for answering. While we seem to disagree fundamentally on this issue (or at least seem to have a different understanding of the facts – or even what constitutes a ‘fact’ in the first instance), at least you responded, which is more than can be said for cubix up there whose tactic seemed to be to blithely ignore my simple (what’s more simple than a single-word question?) request for a bit of substance to back up his sweeping generalisation.

      Lastly, please don’t presume to speak for all taxpayers. You do not.

      (As an aside: is there anyone left who knows the difference between their, there and they’re any more?

      Firstly- I am a taxpayer and I want to know how my money is spent.

      Secondly – I dont like the tone of your post and I certainly will not justify it by answering it. If you want to put it to me in an adult manner – I will consider it.

    • #750557
      jimg
      Participant

      Secondly – I dont like the tone of your post and I certainly will not justify it by answering it. If you want to put it to me in an adult manner – I will consider it.

      That person asked:

      How many ‘idiotic complaints’ are you aware of An Taisce having taken to the courts with the associated expense to the taxpayer?

      You answered:

      The M7 motorway
      The M4 motorway
      The M50 motorway
      The M11 motorway
      The M3 motorway
      The M1 motorway particularly at Lissenhall – they thought the Swans would die this time.
      Every single motorway ever built here was objected to by An Taisce
      Dublin Port Tunnel
      Spencer Dock development
      Intel expansion at Liexlip – now that was unbelieveable! – only 5000 people work there!
      I could go on and on and on – and there only some of the ones I remember off the top of my head.

      I don’t remeber hearing of a single instance where An Taisce have been “to the courts at the taxpayers expense” and particularly I didn’t hear of it happening for any of the above developments. That’s not to say they didn’t happen but I’d be surprised as I generally follow the papers and haven’t heard of a single court case taken by An Taisce for anything in your list. So if you could provide links to newspaper stories for these court cases taken at the tax payers expense or any other evidence that these court cases happened, it would certainly clear things up for everyone.

      Cubix’s “response” to a very straightforward request for any evidence to back up their claims is to avoid the question and suggest that I’m an old fart. Well, this is a public messageboard; you may be used to spouting ignorant rubbish to your mates in the pub without being questioned on it but here, if you post something ignorant, be prepared to read responses questioning what you’ve posted or asking for evidence to back it up. That’s the way these things work. If you don’t like it or can’t handle being challenged in this way, then you’re using the wrong media.

      Paul h,

      But as i was reading that it occured to me you could replace ‘an taisce’ with ‘high rise’ and it could also be a fairly accurate statement

      We have plenty of discussion and threads pro/anti highrise. My very first post to this messageboard was one in support of high-rise for Dublin. So don’t confuse a simple request for evidence against An Taisce with an anti-high-rise agenda. I support high-rise for Dublin and also generally support An Taisce. The organisation have made plenty of mistakes without people making stuff up about them.

      The only real evidence presented against them so far is that they’ve criticised plans to build a seven story building in Temple Bar. That’s all. They’ve had the NERVE to suggest to the media that it might not be a good idea for the character of Temple Bar to have a single building completely out of scale with everything around it. In my opinion, they are dead right. If you wanted to set back the cause of taller buildings in Dublin you couldn’t do it more effectively; build complete out of scale tall buildings in historically sensitive areas. This is what happened back in 60s the last time we had a round of taller buildings and it’s taken 30 years for the public and the planners to even consider taller buildings again.

    • #750558
      BTH
      Participant

      An Taisce are dead right to be questioning the Fleet Street scheme. It’s clearly too high for the immediate area it will impact on the Bank of Ireland, popping up over it’s parapet when viewed from Nassau St./Grafton St. corner, it will impact on views from across the river, looming up over the quays – plus it’s design, whilst looking wonderfully shiny and trendy with all it’s staggered windows and suchlike, will look very much of it’s time in a few years…
      As for An Taisce in general, sometimes they make mistakes, sometimes they can be hijacked by cranks and people with other agendas, but they are working for the good of the built environment in this country. Noone else is doing it so I believe thay are providing an important service. If some people on this board had their way it seems that anything shiny and flashy and new would be waved ahead, no matter what impact it would have on it’s surroundings.

    • #750559
      Morlan
      Participant

      News just in:

      The Irish Times

      A major discrepancy between the winning scheme for the U2 Tower at Britain Quay in Dublin’s Docklands and the much taller structure intended to be built is revealed by a drawing obtained by The Irish Times. This follows a hotly contested competition involving four development consortiums for the contract to build the tower, which would include an egg-shaped studio “pod” for the U2 rock group suspended above a public observation deck. The drawing supplied by the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) shows two versions of the west elevation of the tower designed by international architects Foster + Partners and chosen by the authority as its winning scheme last month. On the left is the scheme which was adjudicated on in the competition. It complied with the requirements of the DDDA’s brief and, in particular, the height limitations of the amended planning scheme for the Grand Canal Docks. The planning scheme specified that the main element of the U2 Tower should not exceed 100m in height to its “shoulder”, and any accommodation above this level was not to bring the overall height to more than 120m.

      Here’s a scan of the schematic in the article: – Sorry it’s a bit -crooked-
      edit: Actually, I might be better off using the Archiseek scan, but only if that’s alright with you Paul – I thought I should ask first. I think you did a better scan job!



      My original photochops:

    • #750560
      darkman
      Participant

      may be used to spouting ignorant rubbish to your mates in the pub without being questioned on it but here, if you post something ignorant

      meh, I will just put you on my ignore list. Its easier.

    • #750561
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      meh, I will just put you on my ignore list. Its easier.

      Any chance you could put me on there too?

    • #750562
      alonso
      Participant

      jaysus it’s all gone a bit

      on this thread…

    • #750563
      massamann
      Participant

      I suppose it just goes to show that if a discussion on the relative merits of the very existance of An Taisce stirs up such emotion, then it’s no surprise that the actual work they do is such a sore point.

      For what it’s worth, I believe they serve a crucial role as Devils Advocate in the planning process. Why not have a dedicated group that opposes every development that is proposed? I’m serious – think about it. If the development is strong enough, then it will survive; if not, it will fail and An Taisce will have served a valuable purpose.

      Now the fact that these objections take months (if not years in the courts) to be decided is hardly An Taisce’s fault – it’s more a problem with our planning and legal systems. The public has no faith in the honesty of planning departments, and given what has been revealed over the last few years, I’m not surprised. So everything ends up in the High Court.

      Let politicians develop area plans, and then get them out of the planning process. Why Cousin Seamus’ application for a bungalow down the road is a worthy subject for a councillor to write a letter about, I have no idea. Then let An Taisce, the developers and whoever else present their cases, and have an open and transparent decision made by the planners.

      Now if only it were that simple… 😮

    • #750564
      Rory W
      Participant

      On the whole An Taisce do a good job, sometimes they do themselves no favours but on the whole they are more a good thing than a bad thing. In order to maintain support amongst some of the few people in this country who take an active interest in the built environment they have to make some objections that may seem contentious, but on the whole they are a good thing – let’s leave it at that.

    • #750565
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @Rory W wrote:

      let’s leave it at that.

      Seconded. This is turning into a major derail, and it’s a debate that has occurred often enough here before.

      There are important things still to say about this development- for example, the similarity of its profile to the ‘Seats are not for feet’ sign on the Luas still hasn’t been remarked on.

      (An Taisce debates: the Godwin’s Law of architectural discussions?)

    • #750566
      PTB
      Participant

      To try put this building into context, it is same height as 30 St mary Axe (the Gherkin) at 180m. The lower version is equal to 2 60m liberty halls stacked upon one another

    • #750567
      paul h
      Participant

      Yea but 60 m of the building doesn’t really make much of a visual impact, perhaps improving the look as it tapers off into nothing
      So its really only 130m 😀

      Are you really trying to scare the children PTB!!:D
      Here to put it in some actual perspective is a pic with old u2 tower
      Its an old picture so im sure you could add on a few more giants

      Maybe you’ll need a magnifying glass:p

      [ATTACH]6267[/ATTACH]

    • #750568
      jimg
      Participant

      let’s leave it at that

      Generally I’d be inclined to agree with this approach. However I… I just can’t help trying to have the last word here. 😀

      A bunch of lies have been spouted about An Taisce in this thread – in particular that they use taxpayers money to sustain court cases against vital infrastructure development. This is complete and absolute bullsh*t; not a single one of the claimed court cases occurred.

      What’s annoying about these accusations is their hit-and-run nature. If you ask for evidence for any of the An Taisce bashing claims, you either get “meh I’d rather put you on ignore” or else you get personal abuse. 😡

      That’s my last word on the subject…. unless someone else stirs it up again. By the way, I prefer the Hadid :p

    • #750569
      darkman
      Participant

      A bunch of lies have been spouted about An Taisce in this thread

      No.

      This is complete and absolute bullsh*t; not a single one of the claimed court cases occurred.

      Erm maybe you would want to have another look.

      or else you get personal abuse

      :rolleyes: I did not personally abuse anyone. Do I have to quote a part of your last post?

    • #750570
      jimg
      Participant

      I thought you’d decided to ignore me? :confused:

      No

      Among other things, you claimed that An Taisce’s court cases were funded by the taxpayer. That’s a lie.

      You also claimed that An Taisce had initiated court actions against the M1, the M4, the M7, the M11, the M50, the port tunnel and the Intel expansion. More lies. Yes I know they were involved in court action against the M3 but it certainly wasn’t at the taxpayers expense.

      😀 What’s hillarious is your injured and hurt tone. It’s fair game for you to falsely malign thousands of mostly volunteer members of An Taisce, but when challenged you go into a huff because you don’t like the “tone” of the challenge. 😀 It’s fairly obvious that it’s not the “tone” you find don’t like – it’s admitting you’re wrong.

    • #750571
      darkman
      Participant

      @jimg wrote:

      I thought you’d decided to ignore me? :confused:

      Among other things, you claimed that An Taisce’s court cases were funded by the taxpayer. That’s a lie.

      You also claimed that An Taisce had initiated court actions against the M1, the M4, the M7, the M11, the M50, the port tunnel and the Intel expansion. More lies. Yes I know they were involved in court action against the M3 but it certainly wasn’t at the taxpayers expense.

      Im not wrong – and the M7 Kildare bypass was taken to court and An Taisce lodged an appeal against the Intel expansion, the Southeastern motorway………..just out of curiosty who do you think foots the bill every time they lose a case on an important infrastructure project? An Taisce?

    • #750572
      ake
      Participant

      Maybe it would be useful to compare An Taisce’s approach to the Point Village tower, now under construction. That should show whether or not they’re hell bent against all high rise, or just Foster’s U2.

    • #750573
      Mick
      Participant

      The rush to embrace the Foster design, ignore the glaring problems with the tender process and castigate anyone who dares to criticise either the design or the process is ridiculous.

      There are many serious problems with the process, you only have to look at the newspaper articles already published by the likes of Frank McDonald, Neil Callanan and Garry Miley to understand the level of serious disquiet at the tender process the DDDA would have us believe it has completed.

      Given that Ballymore and U2 are the underbidder here by some €30M and given that the DDDA has already spent some €20M from the public purse in developing their previous design, the Irish tax payer has forgone some €50M for the pleasure of selecting this Foster design. And here’s where the photomontage is important, we’re foregoing that €50M not for the breathtaking design like the Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank or the Reichstag or the Gherkin but for a bottom-drawer, second-hand design that Foster has already built for another client in Sydney.

      Ballymore and U2 may be rightly pissed off with Foster for selling them a pup in this way. It’s cost the rest of us an awful lot more and we should be up in arms.

      So let’s be honest about what the real issues are here. We deserve a properly run tender process, real Value for Money and a ‘breathtaking’ design and should not be settling for anything less in any regard.

    • #750574
      Anonymous
      Participant
      Mick wrote:
      And here’s where the photomontage is important, we’re foregoing that &#8364]

      What kind of goggles are you wearing that makes you think the current proposal is ripping off Deutsche Bank in Sydney ? Its already clear that you doctored the render for your own ends.
      Your argument on that score is seriously undermined, whatever about anything else.

    • #750575
      damcw
      Participant

      What did he doctor? The image he used is on this page: http://www.sydneyarchitecture.com/cbd/1cbd4MCO.htm

      It’s #039

      A quick google and you’d have seen it. How about we stick to attacking architecture rather than each other, eh?

    • #750576
      paul h
      Participant

      damcw ,
      Someone stated earlier the u2 building was ‘straightened’ to make it look more like the sydney design
      anyhoo………
      Heres another picture and it looks nothing like u2 building, the comparison is quite lame
      [ATTACH]6296[/ATTACH]

    • #750577
      Anonymous
      Participant

      @damcw wrote:

      What did he doctor? The image he used is on this page: http://www.sydneyarchitecture.com/cbd/1cbd4MCO.htm

      It’s #039

      A quick google and you’d have seen it. How about we stick to attacking architecture rather than each other, eh?

      ok the building is being dismissed in this case on the grounds that it is a ‘second hand pup’, that is the crux of his argument & it is the second time it has been put forward based on a doctored render. Altered or not, the resembelance is extremely weak in my opinion]http://www.webeireann.com/archiseek/sydney_foster.jpg[/IMG]

    • #750578
      damcw
      Participant

      🙂

      Ok point taken. I misunderstood the accusation, sorry.

      There are no daytime renderings of what the energy center will look like on the inside, do you feel it will take away from the attractiveness of the building? Does anyone know of any examples built elsewhere with such a large proportion of its height donated to turbines?

      am I mad or do i remember an energy center located at the top of the Freedom Tower in New York as it was originally proposed?

    • #750579
      darkman
      Participant

      MHO the building has to go to 180m now. We want to make a statement on the skyline and, tbh, a 130m building with the top ‘cut off’ would not be good.

    • #750580
      shamrockmetro
      Participant

      kill the energy centre it will look like dogs balls

    • #750581
      PTB
      Participant

      This energy center puzzles me. If there’s going to be turbines in this thing, then they would be facing into the prevailing westerly most of the time. However it seems as though the energy center will only be open on the north and south faces and that the wind will be flowing through the energy center for short spaces of time, thus reducing it’s effectiveness.

    • #750582
      shadow
      Participant

      Rock and roll

    • #750583
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Seems to me An Taisce is talking a load of nonsense in relation to the U2 tower.

      I mean, come on, rising sea levels? How is this an issue that affects the U2 tower but not every other building in the docklands and ringsend. Why don’t they invoke the threat of tsunamis and earthquakes while they’re at it. What are they suggesting, all development in the docklands be halted? That the developers of the U2 tower be responsible for building flood barriers across Dublin bay that will probably never be needed?

      As for the height impact, the 130m U2 tower already has planning permission, are an taisce now saying they’ve missed the boat in objecting to it? I’m sure they must have been consulted on the alteration to the grand canal docks masterplan to allow the 130m U2 tower. As for the 180m tower, there is no planning permission so they can object away at that point if it is ever applied for (Given the current property market and downturn in the economy, looks like the watchtower will be the only half of our “gateway” we’ll ever see anyway)



      Building plans give U2 hometown blues

      · Critics say Foster design will ruin Dublin skyline
      · Band accused of ignoring impact of rising sea level

      Henry McDonald in Dublin
      Monday December 3, 2007
      The Guardian

      Abroad, the biggest rock band on the planet are lauded as the champions of the poor and the conscience of rich nations normally indifferent to global poverty.

      But at home in their native Dublin, U2 have become embroiled in a row with Irish environmentalists over two building projects, with Bono and co accused of arrogance.

      U2 have also come under fire for moving their music publishing company from the Irish Republic to the continent in order to pay a lower rate of tax on their royalties.

      Article continues
      Ireland’s equivalent of the National Trust – An Taisce – has denounced U2’s plans to partly demolish and redevelop a hotel they own by the river Liffey in Dublin. An Taisce has also demanded a public inquiry into the new “U2 Tower”, which, at 32 storeys, would be the highest building in Ireland.

      Sited at the mouth of Dublin Bay, the U2 Tower will be designed by Norman Foster. An Taisce fears it will blight the Georgian cityscape on the southern side of the Liffey.

      “Our biggest concern is that the U2 Tower will stick out of the skyline from parts of Georgian Dublin like Merrion Square. It could potentially be an incongruous blot on the skyline on the south side of the city,” said Ian Lumley, An Taisce’s national heritage officer.

      Lumley claimed there was no proper environmental impact survey carried out for the proposed project. Nor, he said, had U2 or the planners taken into consideration one of the band’s global concerns: the impact of climate change.

      “From the limited information we have seen about the proposed tower there is no consideration being taken into the impact of rising sea levels,” he added. “This tower is at the mouth of Dublin Bay and yet no provision has been made as to the effect of rising sea levels on an entire area earmarked for more residential living as well as businesses. For all these reasons there has to be an independent public inquiry before this project is allowed to go ahead.”

      Further down the Liffey there is more controversy about another U2-owned property, The Clarence hotel, which the band revitalised thanks in part to a tax-exemption scheme in the 1990s aimed at reviving the entire Temple Bar district.

      U2 plans a €150m (£100m) revamp of The Clarence, which Bono has promised will turn it into one of the most spectacular hotels in Europe. This project has been criticised by An Taisce and veteran environmentalist Mike Smith.

      Smith accused U2 of acting arrogantly over the Clarence plan. He warned that if Ireland’s planning authority, An Bord Pleanála, allowed the scheme to go through he would go to court to halt it.

      “Since 2000 Ireland has had strong protection for listed buildings which are now called ‘protected structures’,” Smith said. “In the case of The Clarence the developers’ belief that there is an exceptional need to pander to international five-star punters’ alleged insistence on underground parking and swimming pools is unlikely to pass muster … If An Bord Pleanála say yes I will go straight to the high court to block what U2 are planning.”

      He was also scathing of U2’s decision to move part of its music operations out of Ireland to the Netherlands, and added: “The common good is not served by allowing the richest people in Ireland to build with the benefit of tax incentives, which is what happened to Temple Bar and The Clarence, only to demolish when they get bored,” Smith added.

      A spokesman for The Clarence hotel project said that it would encourage investment in the city. “It will help the Irish economy to retain its reputation as progressive and sustainable by providing facilities and services to business and tourism clientele as well as local residents,” he added.

    • #750584
      darkman
      Participant

      Rising sea levels? – This is bullsh*t. As for an Taisce – this sort of behaviour from an organistion who’s apparent role is to protect our heritage against projects in the Docklands – is actually now embarrasing us in the world’s media. A Sydney newspaper also had something similar this morning. Poor little Paddy does not want a 32 storey building in Dublin……….because some little tree hugger said so? 32 storeys!? Environmentalists in most countries dont get out of bed for less then 60!

      ‘An Taisce fears it will blight the Georgian cityscape on the southern side of the Liffey.’

      This is absolute rubbish. Id say the building would want to be twice the height to have this effect. Any little thing to discredit these projects……

    • #750585
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @darkman wrote:

      ‘An Taisce fears it will blight the Georgian cityscape on the southern side of the Liffey.’

      This is absolute rubbish. Id say the building would want to be twice the height to have this effect. Any little thing to discredit these projects……

      I agree- that comment in the context of the Docklands is a bit silly- Georgian? But you appear to be taking An Taisce to task for someone else’s lazy journalism- don’t blame AnT for the failings of The Guardian.

      (Unless it suits your ‘argument’ to do so, which we know by now to be the case. So please, carry on with your nonsense. It’s entertaining watching the bluster rise, if nothing else.)

      On an unrelated note, I presume you’re aware of Sydney’s current reappraisal of their tall buildings policy? Perhaps our cautious approach will, in time, prove to be enviable rather than embarrassing?

    • #750586
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      I agree- that comment in the context of the Docklands is a bit silly- Georgian? But you appear to be taking An Taisce to task for someone else’s lazy journalism- don’t blame AnT for the failings of The Guardian.

      Hold on a sec, that’s exactly what An Taisce are saying – with regards its potential impact on Merrion Square. Which if there is an impact should have been brought up at the time of planning permission.

    • #750587
      adhoc
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      I agree- that comment in the context of the Docklands is a bit silly- Georgian? But you appear to be taking An Taisce to task for someone else’s lazy journalism- don’t blame AnT for the failings of The Guardian.

      (Unless it suits your ‘argument’ to do so, which we know by now to be the case. So please, carry on with your nonsense. It’s entertaining watching the bluster rise, if nothing else.)

      On an unrelated note, I presume you’re aware of Sydney’s current reappraisal of their tall buildings policy? Perhaps our cautious approach will, in time, prove to be enviable rather than embarrassing?

      I presume you’re referring to Barangaroo (http://www.barangaroo.com/), the new docklands development in Sydney Harbour under the planning authority of a body not unlike the DDDA, the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority: http://www.shfa.nsw.gov.au/

      They are planning yet more tall buildings in the harbour. There’s a video presentation showing the past, present and future of the development site: http://www.barangaroo.com/downloads/061005_EDH_conceptanimation_V1_WEB.mpg

      Article on Barangaroo from Sydney Morning Herald
      http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/developers-given-green-light-to-think-wide-or-tall/2007/11/30/1196394622474.html

    • #750588
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Interesting. So they are planning a number of tall buildings with a decent amount of floor space and large areas of open space and parks. Sure we don’t need that in Dublin, we can accomplish the decent amount of floor space by just putting 7 storey buildings everywhere and leaving out the parkland.

      From the front page of http://www.barangaroo.com:
      Potzdammer Platz, Berlin
      Bilbao, Spain
      Southbank, London

      No mention of Dublin’s docklands. Funny that.

      @adhoc wrote:

      I presume you’re referring to Barangaroo (http://www.barangaroo.com/), the new docklands development in Sydney Harbour under the planning authority of a body not unlike the DDDA, the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority: http://www.shfa.nsw.gov.au/

      They are planning yet more tall buildings in the harbour. There’s a video presentation showing the past, present and future of the development site: http://www.barangaroo.com/downloads/061005_EDH_conceptanimation_V1_WEB.mpg

      Article on Barangaroo from Sydney Morning Herald
      http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/developers-given-green-light-to-think-wide-or-tall/2007/11/30/1196394622474.html

    • #750589
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @adhoc wrote:

      I presume you’re referring to Barangaroo

      Nope.

      JoePublic wrote:
      ctesiphon wrote:
      I agree- that comment in the context of the Docklands is a bit silly- Georgian? But you appear to be taking An Taisce to task for someone else’s lazy journalism- don’t blame AnT for the failings of The Guardian.

      Hold on a sec, that’s exactly what An Taisce are saying – with regards its potential impact on Merrion Square. Which if there is an impact should have been brought up at the time of planning permission.

      Two things:

      1)
      “An Taisce fears it will blight the Georgian cityscape on the southern side of the Liffey.”

      does not mean the same thing as

      “Our biggest concern is that the U2 Tower will stick out of the skyline from parts of Georgian Dublin like Merrion Square.”

      There is a small matter of journalistic interpretation at play here.

      2)

      JoePublic wrote:
      “Which if there is an impact should have been brought up at the time of planning permission.”

      What does this mean?

    • #750590
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      Nope.

      Two things:

      1)
      “An Taisce fears it will blight the Georgian cityscape on the southern side of the Liffey.”

      does not mean the same thing as

      “Our biggest concern is that the U2 Tower will stick out of the skyline from parts of Georgian Dublin like Merrion Square.”

      There is a small matter of journalistic interpretation at play here.

      2)

      What does this mean?

      1) The full context of the article made it pretty clear I thought

      2) It means the 130m U2 tower already has planning permission. Why didn’t An Taisce kick up a fuss at the time?

    • #750591
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      1) My point, made recently enough in this thread and elsewhere, is that darkman has a relatively casual approach to the facts, especially when it comes to attacking An Taisce, and if his targets can be made of straw, then so much the easier.

      2) The tower categorically does not have planning permission. And there was no earlier time at which An Taisce could have kicked up a fuss, as the planning scheme for the area never included plans for this building or for one of an equivalent height- even the amended version of the scheme.

      Please re-read my earlier posts in this thread regarding this topic. In essence (because I know you’re a busy man) I said that this building does not comply with the provisions of the relevant DDDA planning scheme and should not therefore be construed to have de facto planning permission.

      Also, I find it instructive in debates such as these to distinguish between a Section 25 permission and a standard local authority planning permission.

    • #750592
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      1) My point, made recently enough in this thread and elsewhere, is that darkman has a relatively casual approach to the facts, especially when it comes to attacking An Taisce, and if his targets can be made of straw, then so much the easier.

      2) The tower categorically does not have planning permission. And there was no earlier time at which An Taisce could have kicked up a fuss, as the planning scheme for the area never included plans for this building or for one of an equivalent height- even the amended version of the scheme.

      Please re-read my earlier posts in this thread regarding this topic. In essence (because I know you’re a busy man) I said that this building does not comply with the provisions of the relevant DDDA planning scheme and should not therefore be construed to have de facto planning permission.

      Also, I find it instructive in debates such as these to distinguish between a Section 25 permission and a standard local authority planning permission.

      1) I think you’re misrepresenting what Darkman said. I thought he was saying that the building would need to be twice as high to impact on merrion square (I don’t know whether that’s the case or not). It’s splitting hairs anyway

      2) Not a busy man, on a career break for December, so writing this from my bed as I read some books :-). I thought it was clarified that the amended planning scheme allows architectual features over 120m up to a height of 130m. So the Foster design does comply with the amended scheme, and has de facto planning permission. Anyway we’re talking about 10 meters here, will it really satisfy you or An Taisce if they reduce the overall height to 120m?

    • #750593
      d_d_dallas
      Participant

      God, An T should know better than to throw remarks like that out into the media. It merely serves to throw oil on the flames of their naysayers. Personally I think they’d be best to make their submissions in the correct manner and not through the forum of public opinion. It’s a battle they will never win. Also for the docklands to be breathlessly promoted as a suitable place for tall buildings, only to have the only tall building proposed in the area criticised is just plain dumb. An T usually do the right thing, but should be much more sophisticated in their approach. Silence is golden!

    • #750594
      darkman
      Participant

      @ctesiphon wrote:

      (Unless it suits your ‘argument’ to do so, which we know by now to be the case. So please, carry on with your nonsense. It’s entertaining watching the bluster rise, if nothing else.)

      I think you should stop being so lazy and read my post again……. some people:rolleyes:

    • #750595
      Keen
      Participant

      The refernce to rising sea levels almost made me barf. I think of Rotterdam which is much more prone to flooding and it’s FULL of skyscrapers with 32 storeys or more. Maybe the Dutch are more proactive with holding back the North Sea, but god i wonder how so many great projects get built there. Hmm the Dutch seem to pride themselves on their architecture and engineering ingenuity…maybe the U2 tower should move to holland as well??? 😡

      I love the vision of the Harbour in Rotterdam (much is already U/C)

      They even build skyscrapers IN water on reclaimed land 😮

    • #750596
      tfarmer
      Participant

      This is embarrassing. How long have they been planning this thing? What is it over 5 or 6 years and they are still at it. At this rate any other city in the world would have built 5 skyscrapers. Why in Ireland is planning such a long drawn out affair, ffs its not an ancient druid council meeting, its a skyscraper you design it, plan for construction then build it. No in Ireland we must consult the dog in the street, make sure granny is happy and have the obilgatory round of infighting before anything gets done.

    • #750597
      jdivision
      Participant

      @tfarmer wrote:

      This is embarrassing. How long have they been planning this thing? What is it over 5 or 6 years and they are still at it. At this rate any other city in the world would have built 5 skyscrapers. Why in Ireland is planning such a long drawn out affair, ffs its not an ancient druid council meeting, its a skyscraper you design it, plan for construction then build it. No in Ireland we must consult the dog in the street, make sure granny is happy and have the obilgatory round of infighting before anything gets done.

      Not at all but in Ireland we do have a planning and development body controlling the docklands development that strangled and bungled the whole thing.

    • #750598
      aidanc
      Participant

      DCCC is no better. Look at all the flats that were awarded PPPs years ago that have yet to start. O’Devaney Gardens, St Michaels, Cherry Orchard (2,000 not stared), Ballymun (which is only half finished after 10 years). They talked about regenerating Fatima more than 10 years ago and it still is not done. DCCC boasts about all the hundreds of consultations that were done with thses PPPs but half of the punters that attended have moved or are dead.

    • #750599
      theman
      Participant

      @tfarmer wrote:

      ffs its not an ancient druid council meeting, its a skyscraper you .

      It’s actually something far worse – the DDDA. The thing is, the planning couldn’t be simpler – 6 weeks turnaround, no appeals, off you go. But with the DDDA involved, they have made a mockery of this project.

    • #750600
      shamrockmetro
      Participant

      i am very curious as to how and to what extent he will do the wave on the facade…

      but a more important question for you….

      should foster go for reflective glass on the south/west/east facing facade???? or not???

      I really hope foster expresses the edge details on this building with reflective glass….

      we will see…

      another thing why cant you see dda applications on the internet?? is this possible to see these drawings?

    • #750601
      cgcsb
      Participant

      So it’s been nearly a decade now, a waisted one in my opinion, all this time and it looks unlikely that this project will come to fruition. After all that money and man power, nothing!

    • #750602
      ForzaIrlanda
      Participant

      Good old Ireland eh 😀

    • #750603
      GregF
      Participant

      There’s a photo of a model of the new U2 tower on the free Metro paper this Friday morning. Looks good (international skyscraper style) and looks an awful lot better than those terrible gimicky renderings.

    • #750604
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      @GregF wrote:

      There’s a photo of a model of the new U2 tower on the free Metro paper this Friday morning. Looks good (international skyscraper style) and looks an awful lot better than those terrible gimicky renderings.

      Yeah it looks excellent, now I want to see less models and more real tower please, whenever that is.

    • #750605
      PTB
      Participant

      That looks nothing like the renders

    • #750606
      darkman
      Participant

      @GregF wrote:

      There’s a photo of a model of the new U2 tower on the free Metro paper this Friday morning. Looks good (international skyscraper style) and looks an awful lot better than those terrible gimicky renderings.

      Anyone able to upload it or anything here. Would love to see it!:(

    • #750607
      CC105
      Participant

      Cant upload it but it looks great, is the picture from the reverse angle as it looks very different, looks very tall indeed, cannot make out if the eco tower part is added or not to the model. Anybody who dislikes the towers going up in Dubai these days may not like this model. 🙂

      Darkman if you are in Dublin pop into any transport hub this evening and you should be able to pick one up.

    • #750608
      cgcsb
      Participant

      So is this project actually going ahead? what is the GD hold up?

    • #750609
      darkman
      Participant

      @CC105 wrote:

      Cant upload it but it looks great, is the picture from the reverse angle as it looks very different, looks very tall indeed, cannot make out if the eco tower part is added or not to the model. Anybody who dislikes the towers going up in Dubai these days may not like this model. 🙂

      Darkman if you are in Dublin pop into any transport hub this evening and you should be able to pick one up.

      I could not get it. I will take your words for it that it looks really good. Nothing on Fosters website at all about it yet. I wonder is the model in docklands anywhere?

    • #750610
      CC105
      Participant

      You could try the DDDA office on the quays as my reading of the article assumed that is where the model was.

    • #750611
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @CC105 wrote:

      You could try the DDDA office on the quays as my reading of the article assumed that is where the model was.

      It wasn’t in the window where the old U2 tower model was yesterday anyway, I checked.

      Anyone got a scanner or even a digital camera to take a photo of the metro picture?

    • #750612
      CiaranMurphy
      Participant

      I have a copy I’ll post later tonight. Eh, no I don’t think that is the U2 tower. It looks a dead ringer for thisDAMAC tower in Dubai though… all 90 floors! The photo was of Darren Simpson and Charlie King of Damac properties… so I wonder if it was just a stock shot.

      I suspect shoddy journalism really. But maybe I’m wrong… I don’t really expect much from the Metro TBH.

    • #750613
      darkman
      Participant

      Thanks! I suspect you are probrably right. No image anywhere on the internet or on any other paper ive seen. Id imagine the DDDA would be anxious to show off a model of their pet project.

    • #750614
      PTB
      Participant

      @CiaranMurphy wrote:

      I have a copy I’ll post later tonight. Eh, no I don’t think that is the U2 tower. It looks a dead ringer for thisDAMAC tower in Dubai though… all 90 floors! The photo was of Darren Simpson and Charlie King of Damac properties… so I wonder if it was just a stock shot.

      I suspect shoddy journalism really. But maybe I’m wrong… I don’t really expect much from the Metro TBH.

      Yep, that looks more like it.

    • #750615
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      Straight from the green bin 😉

    • #750616
      rob mc
      Participant

      now thats what i call a skyscraper!!!:D

    • #750617
      alonso
      Participant

      Yeh I’d a feeling it was dodgy journalism as well. Seems it most definitely was. Now where’s ctesiphon with a trademark biting barb about the Metro and crayons when you need him?

    • #750618
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      Yep trés dodgy indeed, all the people reading the Metro last Friday were like “ooh look at the size of that!”. I just said “Where’s the bloomin’ egg?”

    • #750619
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Feckin eejits! (Metro that is)

      A nice example of the kind of skycrapers we SHOULD be building though. National conference centre hotel in spencer dock, compare and contrast?

    • #750620
      notjim
      Participant

      @JoePublic wrote:

      A nice example of the kind of skycrapers we SHOULD be building though. National conference centre hotel in spencer dock, compare and contrast?

      A but now you are being silly JoePublic, that building has more in common with the NCC proposal, which you oppose, than the U2 tower, which you support.

    • #750621
      Morlan
      Participant

      Those yellow ties are brutal.

    • #750622
      JoePublic
      Participant

      @notjim wrote:

      A but now you are being silly JoePublic, that building has more in common with the NCC proposal, which you oppose, than the U2 tower, which you support.

      I really don’t see how you can say that, but howandever.

    • #750623
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @alonso wrote:

      Now where’s ctesiphon with a trademark biting barb about the Metro and crayons when you need him?

      When a man has taken the trouble to coat himself in manure, he doesn’t need me to tell him he smells.

    • #750624
      cgcsb
      Participant

      Am I to understand that the design of U2 tower has changed again? is there still an energy centre and a gap at the base of the building with a through road like the last design? Is this it finally a definative design, final, definate, or will this be another ten years?

    • #750625
      jdivision
      Participant

      cgcsb, the suggestion is that the Metro got it wrong and inaccurately labelled it the U2 tower when in fact it’s a tower in Dubai. A suggestion that seems reasonably clear from comparing the images.

    • #750626
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      Metro have printed an apology on the letters page this morning, yep it is the tower in Dubai 🙁

    • #750627
      paul h
      Participant

      Seville ,Spain – they recently held an skyscraper competion, not unlike our u2 debacle,

      Winner is a 178m tall 40storey Cesar Pelli design, nothing amazing in my non-expert opinion

      BUT, what are the odds this WILL be built roughly on time:D, its scheduled for completion c2010
      http://www.skyscrapernews.org/news.php?ref=1375

    • #750628
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      In Seville 2010 you’ll be assured that 40 storey building will be dominating the skyline, what’ll we have?

    • #750629
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @The Denouncer wrote:

      Metro have printed an apology on the letters page this morning, yep it is the tower in Dubai 🙁

      Unlike yesterday, when Metro printed a letter from a guy who left his sports bag on the 8:08 am Dart from Malahide.

      I suppose the story was accurate, at least. 😉

    • #750630
      -Donnacha-
      Participant

      The U2 tower (which I’m not sure I like) is still 10 times better than that Pelli building in Seville. The giant police light in a steel cage on top is horrible!

    • #750631
      paul h
      Participant

      Apologies for staying slightly off topic but-
      Also another 130m building approved, in Rome of all places……..
      Expected to be completed 2010
      When will the rest of the planet listen to us in Ireland, high rise just doesnt work 😀
      http://www.skyscrapernews.org/news.php?ref=1378

      ps i would post picture but the link is less ‘in yer face’

    • #750632
      cgcsb
      Participant

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U2_Tower

      construction to begin in early 2008 and finish in 2011. I’m not one to trust wikipedia but lets hope it’s true

    • #750633
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      @cgcsb wrote:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U2_Tower

      construction to begin in early 2008 and finish in 2011. I’m not one to trust wikipedia but lets hope it’s true

      Jnestorius, art thou an Archiseek member? Please come forth without haste to explain where thou has obtained thy information.

    • #750634
      cgcsb
      Participant

      It is in the link if you look. At the bottom of the fist paragraph at the bottom of the second (history) paragraph and at the bottom of the paragraph after that. God gave you two eyes, use them

    • #750635
      fergalr
      Participant

      It’s not so much a question of “Vertigo? U2 tower to be taller” as it is “Vertigo? U2 tower to be built?”

    • #750636
      The Denouncer
      Participant

      @cgcsb wrote:

      It is in the link if you look. At the bottom of the fist paragraph at the bottom of the second (history) paragraph and at the bottom of the paragraph after that. God gave you two eyes, use them

      I see it, but I don’t believe it. I never before saw a definitive “Construction is to begin in 2008 and end in 2011” until that article. And I don’t see no paragraph talking about fists.

    • #750637
      cgcsb
      Participant

      I meant to say first

    • #750638
      GregF
      Participant

      This whole U2 Tower debacle is an unfunny joke, like the DDDA.

    • #750639
      Maskhadov
      Participant

      time to pull the plug on the whole project

    • #750640
      Pepsi
      Participant

      @Maskhadov wrote:

      time to pull the plug on the whole project

      i agree. i for one am sick and tired of waiting for them to get their act together.:mad:

    • #750641
      Morlan
      Participant

      Agreed. What a miserable bore.

    • #750642
      theman
      Participant

      The DDDA are being shown up for the bunch of incompetents they are – you really have to question the quality of leadership and over all cop-on that is going into this project from the DDDA. The whole process has been a fiasco from the word go. It must sicken them to see the Watchtower going up, knowing that they’ll be sipping cocktails when they top it out, while theres not even a hole in the ground at Britain Quay. 2011? Dream on. A total yawn fest that everyone seems to be losing interest in….

    • #750643
      theman
      Participant

      Courtesy of http://www.independent.ie, 8th May 2008:

      After years of planning, wrangling and rowing, it finally looks like the landmark U2 tower is finally set to get off the ground. Plans for the Liffey highrise remain on course even though a formal agreement with the developers has still not been struck.

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) said negotiations between it and the preferred bidders – a consortium including U2 members – “are due to be completed shortly”. The DDDA expects “construction of the tower to begin by the end of this year or early next year”, a spokesman said.

      Geranger Ltd was chosen by the DDDA as the preferred bidder for the €200m project on Britain Quay in October, beating off competition from Sean Dunne’s Mountbrook Homes. Geranger, a consortium consisting of Ballymore Properties, developer Paddy McKillen and the members of U2, plans to build a skyscraper soaring 60m higher than the Spire.

      ENERGY

      The scheme contains a design for an egg-shaped recording studio suspended beneath a battery of vertical wind turbines and a huge solar panel at the top. This “energy centre” will raise the overall height from 130 metres to 180 metres.

      The Geranger project, a tilted triangular tower designed by Foster & Partners, will include a public viewing platform offering panoramic views over the city and Dublin Bay.

      This will be located just below U2’s “pod” studio, which will be separated from the structure for acoustic reasons.

      Norman Foster’s practice is best known for the Swiss Re or “Gherkin” tower in the city of London.

      DDDA director of architecture John McLaughlin said that the Foster scheme “had the edge because its public spaces were really well handled” and it provided a gateway to a bridge over the Dodder where it joins the Liffey.

      In addition to the tower, which will largely comprise luxury apartments, the scheme includes a five-star hotel in a flanking building, and a block of 34 social and affordable apartments.

    • #750644
      jackwade
      Participant

      http://www.independent.ie/national-news/u2-tower-is-stuck-in-a-moment-1393777.html

      U2 tower is ‘stuck in a moment’
      Fears over property downturn may stall band’s ambitious elevation

      By RONALD QUINLAN

      Sunday June 01 2008

      THERE are growing doubts over the future of the landmark U2 tower in Dublin’s docklands as the fallout from economic downturn continues to take its toll on the property market.

      Informed construction industry sources believe the erection of the Liffeyside high-rise building will at the very least be delayed, or even abandoned as the economic feasibility of the PPP (Public Private Partnership) project diminishes.

      Speaking to the Sunday Independent, one highly-placed source said: “The final contracts haven’t been signed between the developer (Ballymore Homes) and the DDDA (Dublin Docklands Development Authority). Given the way things are going in the industry, don’t expect anything to happen soon.”

      While media reports on May 7 had suggested that a signed agreement between the DDDA and Geranger — a consortium consisting of Sean Mulryan’s Ballymore Homes, developer Paddy McKillen and U2 members — was imminent; last Friday little progress appeared to have been made.

      Responding to the claims that the construction of the U2 tower was now in doubt, a spokesperson for the Docklands Authority said the “negotiation process was still ongoing” and that there were “many complicated issues which have to be agreed” before the development would commence.

      Interestingly, the spokesperson referred to Geranger — the consortium of which Ballymore Homes is a member — as the “provisional” preferred bidder for the development of the U2 tower.

      The spokesperson stressed, however, that the dockland authority was satisfied with progress on the negotiations.

      Ballymore Homes, meanwhile, refused to comment on claims that it was reluctant to sign the final contracts required before the development of the U2 tower could get underway.

      Responding to questions on the matter last Friday, a spokesperson for the developer said: “In agreement with the Dublin Docklands Development Authority, Ballymore Homes is precluded from commenting on this to the media.”

      The proposed 120-metre tower is the latest Public Private Partnership (PPP) project to come under threat from worsening conditions in the residential property sector.

      Only two weeks ago, five PPP housing regeneration schemes were derailed after multimillionaire developer Bernard McNamara withdrew on the grounds that they were no longer financially viable and is currently discussing the future of the project with Dublin City Council.

      Explaining his decision, Mr McNamara cited larger apartment sizes and tighter building regulations as the major factors in making the developments in Dublin’s inner city unworkable.

      In the case of the proposed U2 tower development, among the hundreds of apartments and offices there are plans for the provision of a block of 34 social and affordable housing units under the terms of the PPP agreement.

      Given the prevailing economic conditions, industry sources maintain that it is the proposal for luxury apartments and a high-end hotel that will be of more concern to the development consortium.

      The most notable element of the project, however, is the proposal for an egg-shaped recording studio for U2.

      Suspended beneath vertical wind turbines and a massive solar panel, the studio to replace the band’s famous Windmill Lane facility is poised to raise the height of the Norman Foster-designed tower to 180 metres — 60 metres higher than the O’Connell Street Spire.

      – RONALD QUINLAN

    • #750645
      johnglas
      Participant

      Serves the greedy airheads right for not jumping in when property was booming; better to leave the site empty until the next boom or until someone comes up with a decent landmark design that’s not impossible to build or looks like a dog’s dinner. What’s the justification for PPP here anyway? What will be the public ‘benefit’ (apart from inflating U2’s egos and bank balances – offshore, of course)?

    • #750646
      Anonymous
      Participant

      wouldn’t take too much from that in fairness, … thats not to say that the DDDA haven’t done a spectacular job in fucking this up.

    • #750647
      theman
      Participant

      yeah, nearly 10 years of talking about this project, and €10m wasted in design fees on a tower that was never to be built (never mind how much Ballymore spent on their bid) and it’s still an empty site…they did knock the hailing station, though, so not like they haven’t done anything on the project….:D What a bunch of incompetents that are running this project..farsical….

    • #750648
      Pepsi
      Participant

      i bet something else will go wrong and the watchtower will go the same way. :rolleyes:

    • #750649
      Anonymous
      Participant

      I would strongly hope that pre-lettings at the Point Scheme will ensure that the watch tower is part of an overall development deemed viable and does not face the attention of risk management bods at the scheme’s funders.

      On the U2 tower whilst it is disapointing to see the tower fall foul of the post Bear Sterns environment it is in my opinion far better to see a re-model happen in 2-3 years when it is deemed viable again as opposed to having something on that scale that is less than the latest and greatest.

      In 10 years this area will be full of tall buildings and we’ll all be whinging about one offs again!!

    • #750650
      johnglas
      Participant

      In Glasgow we’ve just demolished another two 1970s slab blocks; yesterday’s ‘solution’, today’s problem. We have a proposal for a vastly tall building on what looks to me to be an impossibly tight site; it’s been a hole in the ground for months. If tall buildings are the ‘answer’ (to which question?), why are they the first victims of even the slightest economic breeze?

    • #750651
      darkman
      Participant

      I dont think anyone has said the U2 tower has been scrapped. The DDDA say they are near to signing the contracts and construction would begin before the end of the year or early next year.

      Im more concerned about the Point tower. I think this has been scrapped. I drove by the site yesterday and there is absolutely no sign of the tower going up. In fact I thought there was no room left for where the tower is meant to be! Maybe im wrong but I think this tower is not going ahead.

    • #750652
      cgcsb
      Participant

      I was under the impression that construction had already started on the foundations

    • #750653
      theman
      Participant

      Other than demolishing the hailing station, nothing done on U2 tower to date. Ok – some site investigations as well. The work adjacent is Liam Carroll’s building – the one that was to have the rival tower in the days of Dunloe Ewart’s involvement. Planning for this tower was secured from DCC circa 2002, and expired in 2007 AFAIK. And, sespite what DDDA say, they do need some of Liam Carroll’s land to realise the full footprint. This was the case with the BCDH tower, which was pretty modest. The new Foster design looks like it requried half the Grand Canal Basin to accommodate it….

    • #750654
      shed
      Participant

      The Watchtower basement slab is in place but there are still some issues with internal layouts n uses. Expect to see some real progress by the end of the summer I would imagine.

    • #750655
      darkman
      Participant

      @shed wrote:

      The Watchtower basement slab is in place but there are still some issues with internal layouts n uses. Expect to see some real progress by the end of the summer I would imagine.

      Hi, do you have access to someone working on the project? Can you confirm the tower has not been abandoned and it is really just ‘internal use’ issues or is it just an assumption? Nobody seems confident this is going ahead particularly with the current housing market. Its the same with the U2 tower.

    • #750656
      shed
      Participant

      My source is on the design team for the Watchtower so it is reliable.

    • #750657
      GregF
      Participant

      Ah, all of this is a load of old bollocks, the DDDA, the building proposal, U2 et all….all complete bollocks. Sure the auld bastards will be retired or dead by the time it is ever built, that ‘s if it is ever built. And sure who cares in any way now . Fuck it and the whole lot of them. The final proposal itself looked awful in any way, Very awkward looking pile of shite tarted up with lights and lasers. Looks as if the whole lotta of them were taking the piss really.
      Should build 2 storey social housing on it instead, with red brick, pebble dash, tarmcadam drive ways for the beloved automobiles, some trees ( to take the harm out of it and that will be readily broken) and a ubiquitous Spar. Now that would be fucking classy and would sum up the last 15 odd years of the building boom.

      Sure it’s not even mentioned on Foster’s website.

      http://www.fosterandpartners.com/Projects/ByLocation/Ireland.aspx

    • #750658
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      So many alternative thread title puns to choose from:

      *pop*

      The forgettable fire / The unforgettable damp squib.

      All that you can leave behind.

      How to dismantle an atomic bomb (i.e. what the DDDA seems to be doing…).

      Songs? Well, ‘Lemon’ is an obvious candidate for starters…

    • #750659
      theman
      Participant

      Running to a standstill?

    • #750660
      alonso
      Participant

      hold me, build me, diss me, kill me?
      Stuck in a moment that you can’t get out of
      Bad
      Sometimes you can’t build it on your own
      Who’s gonna build your big tower
      I Will Foster

      bah

      Why couldn’t it have been a Metallica tower

    • #750661
      darkman
      Participant

      Irish Times

      Thursday, June 19, 2008Around the block
      U2 Tower to be ready by 2011?:

      WITH A NUMBER of high-profile public private partnership (PPP) housing regeneration schemes biting the dust of late, tongues have been wagging about the viability of the ambitious U2 Tower in Dublin’s south docklands.

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority’s (DDDA) annual report published yesterday sets 2011 as the completion date for the tower. However, negotiations between the DDDA and development firm Geranger have been on the long-winded side, to put it mildly.

      Talks between the two parties began last October and Geranger – a consortium consisting of Seán Mulryans Ballymore Homes, developer Paddy McKillen and U2 band and management members – are still being referred to as “provisional preferred bidder” by the DDDA.

      Paul Maloney, chief executive of the DDDA, however, has the end of July as D Day.

      The “state of play” (meaning whether the provisional preferred bidder has moved to preferred bidder) will be announced then, according to Maloney. Not a man to be pinned down, Maloney says that “financial, legal and technical” issues were still being hammered out by the two parties.

      No doubt there is much to discuss. The tower, due to rise to well over 120 metres, will be the tallest building built in Dublin and by far the most ambitious PPP scheme.

      And that’s not to mention the beleaguered residential market and question marks over the feasibility of PPP schemes.

      “Naturally we are being exceptionally careful,” says Maloney.

      Starchitects Foster + Partners’ plans for the €200 million scheme include a hotel, shops and residential accommodation – 20 per cent of which will be social and affordable.

      Referring to the stalled residential market as one of the “hurdles” the authority has to overcome, Maloney insists that it is “committed to ensuring the U2 Tower is built and has taken very significant steps to deliver it”.

      Fingers crossed it won’t be a bad case of vertigo!

      So the end of July is ‘D day’? Is it going to bite the dust? Me thinks so. 🙁

    • #750662
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Any ideas how much apartments in the U2 tower would need to cost to make this project viable?

    • #750663
      jdivision
      Participant

      Well it’s still being redesigned afaik so it’s an ambitious target to have it done by then

    • #750664
      GregF
      Participant

      No way will this hyped up pile of shite be built with this recession. Who cares now in any way, its gone on too long, a bit like U2.

    • #750665
      cgcsb
      Participant

      yea but we all know how U2 like to hear U2 talk about U2. Who cares anyway the point watchtower is going up anyway. mayb in the future if the DDDA get their act together, they’ll find some serious developers for the site.

    • #750666
      theman
      Participant

      TBH, the feasibility of the original design were on a knife edge, that was in the good ole days when people qued up to spend €1m plus on an apartment. Given that the scheme is now an over-blown ego project, twice the size of the original scheme, and the fact the arse has fallen out of residential property, it doesn’t take a genius to work out that it would be shear madness to develop this. End of July – project will be quietly dropped.

    • #750667
      Conorworld
      Participant

      Aesthetically it is a dreadful looking building. Its like a deformed alien fish with antennae and a tumour on its head. I hope it crashes (as an idea)

    • #750668
      gunter
      Participant

      I saw, from a quick back read of the thread, that last year one of the contestants (htd2008 ?) had queried some similarities between his original entry and the new Fosters scheme.

      When I was looking for something else, I came across a render of a different entry (Acito & Partiners) which seems to share several of the main components of the Fosters scheme albeit in stumpy infant, rather that elongated adolescent, form.

      I suspect we’ll all have plenty of time to chew the fat on this and other stalled prestige projects over the coming years

    • #750669
      darkman
      Participant

      Negotiations put U2 Tower in jeopardy
      03 August 2008 By Gavin Daly
      The future of the planned U2 Tower in Dublin is uncertain, with negotiations ongoing between the backers of the €200 million project and the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA).

      Geranger, a consortium made up of U2, Ballymore Properties, property developer Paddy McKillen, and architect Norman Foster, was named preferred bidder for the project last October. Paul Maloney, chief executive of the DDDA, said last month that he expected an agreement by the end of July, but no deal has yet been reached on the 130-metre tower.

      ‘‘Given current market conditions, the DDDA and Geranger Ltd have agreed to extend the negotiation period to allow for further analysis and for design issues relating to the Dodder bridge,” a spokeswoman for the DDDA said last Friday.

      The DDDA has refused to comment on the timescale for the negotiations, which focus on financial, legal and technical aspects of the project.

      The property market has suffered a dramatic slump since Geranger submitted its proposal for the tower, which would be topped with a pod-shaped recording studio for U2. In its annual report, published last month, the DDDA said the U2 Tower was due to be completed in 2011.

      The Watchtower, the 120-metre tower that is part of Harry Crosbie’s Point Village development, is under construction, although architectural sources said that its design had been changed to allocate more floor space to offices rather than apartments.

      :/

    • #750670
      johnny21
      Participant

      Another project delayed as usual.:mad:

      Plans for a new tower to be built in the Dublin Docklands area have been halted by The Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) and financial backer Geranger ltd in order to continue financial negotiations until the 31 October. Geranger ltd is compromised of Ballymore Properties, Patrick McKillen & August Partners and U2 Band members and management and was selected as the provisional bidder to design, construct and finance the €200 million U2 tower. Foster & Partners designed the 120 metre high tower with a public viewing platform, a hotel, retail and residential space including 20% social and affordable housing. The top of the tower will also have an egg shaped pod to house U2’s state of the art recording studio.The site of the tower will be located at the merging of three waterways, the River Liffey, River Dodder and Grand Canal. Construction is expected to begin in 2009.”

      From architecture now website http://architecturenow.ie

    • #750671
      JoePublic
      Participant

      Remember the good old days of 2007 when we had 3 companies fighting each other to build it? Now they can’t interest anyone.

      Of course if the DDDA had their act together, this thing could have been built years ago when the good times were here, grrrrr

    • #750672
      alonso
      Participant

      Missing crane may delay U2 Tower
      DUBLIN Docklands Authority is seeking to remove an old maritime crane from the Record of Protected Structures (RPS) to facilitate the development of the U2 Tower, a local environment group has claimed.

      The authority has applied to Dublin City Council for the crane, believed to have been built on Sir John Rogerson’s Quay at the start of the last century, from the RPS. However, councillors last night voted to postpone the application on the grounds that the crane had “gone missing”.

      Although the crane is on the current RPS, it was removed from the quayside sometime in the last 10 years. A report from senior council planner Patricia Hyde to councillors said the crane was removed “some considerable time ago”. However, the planning department does not know who removed it.

      The planning department recommended to councillors yesterday that they delete the crane from record. However, councillors voted to defer any decision so legal advice could be taken on whether deletion from the RPS would prevent legal action being taken against whoever removed the crane without permission.

      “This crane was part of the history of the docks and was an important symbol of our industrial past,” Labour councillor Kevin Humphreys said.

      “We need to ask the Docklands Authority and Dublin Port who removed it, and we can put in a freedom of information request if needs be, but we should not consider taking it off before we have clarification of the legal position,” Mr Humphreys said.

      Damien Cassidy of the Ringsend, Sandymount and Irishtown Environment Group said the Docklands Authority needed the crane taken off the RPS in order to facilitate the construction of the U2 Tower at Britain Quay and the bridge over the river Dodder.

      The Docklands Authority was not available for comment last night.

      © 2008 The Irish Times

      Only in Ireland….

    • #750673
      reddy
      Participant

      The mind boggles…:confused:

    • #750674
      ForzaIrlanda
      Participant

      One word-FARCE 🙂

    • #750675
      GregF
      Participant

      How is this project coming along, I’m sure it must be nearly finished…….ahem!

    • #750676
      lostexpectation
      Participant

      who owned the place at the time?

    • #750677
      PTB
      Participant

      What made this crane so important?

    • #750678
      GregF
      Participant

      Ah sure much better to have an old disused rusty crane there than a landmak building for the city!

    • #750679
      PTB
      Participant

      Yes, but I gather it could have been moved and conserved.

    • #750680
      johnny21
      Participant

      u2 model!!!:D:cool:!

    • #750681
      cgcsb
      Participant

      I do like the proposed tower, but the fact remains that it’ll most likely never be built

    • #750682
      ihateawake
      Participant

      So if it doesnt go ahead on holloween or whenever, will the site be left for it to be built later or sold on?
      Cheers for pic johnny.

    • #750683
      Pepsi
      Participant

      it won’t be built. end of story. tbh, i don’t know why people even propose the highrises anymore. it’s a waste of time.

    • #750684
      GregF
      Participant

      This will definitley be the Sterling Prize winner next year when it is complete.

    • #750685
      jdivision
      Participant
    • #750686
      lostexpectation
      Participant

      its strange to send a main public highway through a building.

    • #750687
      jdivision
      Participant

      Announcement due today that it’s being delayed by a year. surprise surprise

    • #750688
      Anonymous
      Participant

      and in to oblivion ?

    • #750689
      parka
      Participant

      @Peter Fitz wrote:

      and in to oblivion ?

      U2 will most probably call the new album that 😉

    • #750690
      Rusty Cogs
      Participant

      A quote from http://www.ddda.ie just now

      “Construction is expected to start in 2008 and be completed by 2011. “

      A little website maintenance required methinks.

    • #750691
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Would make a nice park!

    • #750692
      darkman
      Participant

      Delayed – 12 months

      U2 Tower Statement

      Dublin Docklands Development Authority

      Over the past year, the Dublin Docklands Development Authority and Geranger Ltd (*) have been in ongoing discussions regarding the advancement of the U2 Tower as a major project for Dublin Docklands and significant progress has been made. However, the Docklands Authority have now decided to suspend negotiations regarding the development for up to twelve months to allow for an improvement in the current uncertainty surrounding the property and financial markets.

      Geranger was selected as the provisional preferred bidder to design, construct and finance the U2 Tower and Britain Quay Building late last year. However, intervening market events have understandably made progress more difficult.

      The Docklands Authority continues to have full confidence in this landmark project for an inspirational U2 Tower building, which is an important element in the Master Plan for the area.

      The objective is to see this landmark project completed. However, given the current unfavourable economic environment, more time is needed at this juncture. The Docklands Authority will review all of its options on an on-going basis.

      The Authority is confident that these economic uncertainties are short to medium term and that the Docklands will continue to be a vibrant and positive regeneration project for the city of Dublin.

      Since its inception in 1997, the Authority has overseen the development of a world class 520-acre economic hub in the Dublin Docklands and which is currently employing 40,000 people. The Authority looks forward to developing a positive future for all those organisations and people, who live and work in, and visit, the Docklands.

    • #750693
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      The Authority is confident that these economic uncertainties are short to medium term

      Branching out into economic forecasting now as well? Is there anything the DDDA can’t do!?!

    • #750694
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Personally I reckon it’s toast and would be very surprised if it goes ahead. And frankly would be quite happy to see the back of that particular design.

    • #750695
      hutton
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      Personally I reckon it’s toast and would be very surprised if it goes ahead. And frankly would be quite happy to see the back of that particular design.

      +1… it was all very egg-otistical 😮

      So what odds on Clarence being next to be shelved?

    • #750696
      parka
      Participant

      @hutton wrote:

      +1… it was all very egg-otistical 😮

      So what odds on Clarence being next to be shelved?

      I would like to see the Clarence go ahead, the tower should stay an image and nothing else.

    • #750697
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @hutton wrote:

      egg-otistical

      Ego-testicle?

    • #750698
      alonso
      Participant

      the edge’s testicles? Man this thread has gone downhill!!!!!!

    • #750699
      jdivision
      Participant

      D-D-D-Aster

    • #750700
      damnedarchitect
      Participant

      @parka wrote:

      I would like to see the Clarence go ahead, the tower should stay an image and nothing else.

      Eek! While I’m not a fan of either, the U2 tower is at least vaguely contextual. The Clarence is just horrid. Horrid I say!

    • #750701
      GregF
      Participant

      So it’s not gonna go ahead. Ah fuck it!

      …..and fuck the whole lot of them!

    • #750702
      johnny21
      Participant

      Which proposal is better??? The original or recent proposal??? Found a render of original proposal…..looks great but so does the norman foster proposal!!! Which would you pick???:confused:

      [ATTACH]8828[/ATTACH][ATTACH]8829[/ATTACH]

    • #750703
      reddy
      Participant

      Definitely the original – the additional height allowed the Foster proposal could have made this economically viable and a really elegant addition to the skyline.

      Not sure about the lower portion to the left in that image though.

    • #750704
      johnglas
      Participant

      They’re both just over-egged exercises in eg(g)o-massaging; if you think the architecture’s crap, just give it a little twist, or dramatic lighting. Whatever happened to classic skyscraper design? Or is Bono seeing it all through rose-tinted glasses? (Ouch!)
      Y’all have a nice Christmas!

    • #750705
      jdivision
      Participant

      This might be of interest:
      http://www.tribune.ie/business/news/article/2009/jan/11/u2-tower-could-face-legal-challenge/
      Might be legal action in the making

    • #750706
      tfarmer
      Participant

      @Paul Clerkin wrote:

      Docks tower could rise higher
      Frank McDonald, Environment Editor

      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority wants to raise the height of the proposed U2 tower to 100 metres, only 20 metres lower than the Spire.

      Err no they don’t …Ever see ghostbusters 2 where they do the 7 years later thing at the start and they are driving around the city lamenting the good ole days and wishing they could go back?

      Well unfortunately, in this case we don’t have any good ole days to look back on. We squandered them. When we examine this proposal and the infighting between politicians, developers, planning authorities and the media hype we see everything that is bad about this country and nothing that is good. This proposal was made up 10 years ago and all that has occured in between was infighting and design after redesign, farcical and a sham. Landmark tower my ass.

      But then we shouldn’t be surprised because much of the actions of these people i.e. politicians, top level bankers, developers and supposed upholders of the law is coming under closer scrutiny as we suffer an economic collapse. What we missed and didn’t pay attention to during the boom years now just frustrates us as we realise the mismanagement that has occured and the lies spun. A web of deceit. To have Given them the benefit of the doubt is what was the mistake. Heres hoping we can give them a good black eye on their way out…all of them

    • #750707
      Highrise
      Participant

      We have been harping on about this development for the best part of 10 years, in the same period London has done the below, the DDDA should be ashamed:

    • #750708
      johnglas
      Participant

      highrise: are you serious? This is a collection of lit-up shoeboxes.

    • #750709
      spoil_sport
      Participant

      I love NY, but New York is what t is. If Canary Wharf is your thing then go THERE, but it is certinally not a vision I would welcome for Dublin.

    • #750710
      Highrise
      Participant

      I am not referring to the quality of the architecture in Canary Wharf, I am simply using this as an illustration to show how what can be done in a 10 year period, I could have used Dubai etc

    • #750711
      shanekeane
      Participant

      @Highrise wrote:

      I am not referring to the quality of the architecture in Canary Wharf, I am simply using this as an illustration to show how what can be done in a 10 year period, I could have used Dubai etc

      Don’t waste your breath. There’s a lot of people on this site who seem to think that the big, fat, landfill which is the docklands of Dublin is some sort of UNESCO conservation area and who think that building anything more interesting than glass sheds in a CAPITAL CITY is somehow beneath the dignity of Dublin. They will pontificate at wearying length about the architectural shortcomings of highrise buildings in a way that they never would about the square miles of five storey rubbish which have blighted Dublin in the last twenty years, and without recognizing that, given what’s there at the moment, the interest supplied by a cluster of skyscrapers would introduce some much needed dynamism to a dead tract of land, regardless of whether or not the architecture is per se significantly better than the current stock of buildings.

    • #750712
      spoil_sport
      Participant

      I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, “interesting” does not make good, and yes, to suggest that something meerly “interesting” is good enough, is infact beneath the dignity of Dublin. I am not defending the shit in the docklands, but if you take a 6/7 standard issue, lowest common denominator, docklands style facade and extrude it another 20 stories, it will not really improve matters, the Docklands is not shit simply because it is not highrise, there are far more core and qualitive reasons. There is nothing wrong with highrise, with towers, Dublin has a tradition of towers and landmarks, church spires and domes closing vistas, the chimneys of Guinness, Liberty Hall, etc, I would welcome the U2 tower, albeit without the “U2” and perhaps not a Foster (although, there is strangley a nice balance that Dublin’s most important buildings of the 18C, Customs House, Four Courts, were also designed by a Brit)

    • #750713
      gunter
      Participant

      @shanekeane wrote:

      . . . . pontificate . . .


      Frankfurt am Main, or ‘Mainhattan’ in zany German humour.

      God, I don’t necessarily see anything wrong in wanting what other people have, although I’m pretty sure that one or two of the commandments may have had something to say about it !

      A lot of people agree with you that towers and spires have always been the ultimate urban must-have and that the docklands, in particular, would be greatly enlivened if it had a skyline.

      . . . but, in the foreseeable future and as a strategy, building ‘high rise’ to deliver us out of dullness will be like trying to get a knee-jerk reaction out of a corpse.

    • #750714
      johnglas
      Participant

      …there is strangley a nice balance that Dublin’s most important buildings of the 18C, Customs House, Four Courts, were also designed by a Brit

      spoil-sport: Gandon a Brit! Wash your mouth out! Wasn’t his father a Huguenot ‘refugee’? So, they were used to travelling,as it were. Globalisation is nothing new (like much else).
      The idea that the ‘Brits’ built the best bits of 18th and 19thC Dublin is just rubbish; the administration was Brit (there wasn’t exactly a choice, although for a brief period 1782-1801 there was an ‘independent’ Irish legislature), but the taxes, the expenditure, the materials and the manpower (sic) that built them were Irish. Lose the cringe.

    • #750715
      spoil_sport
      Participant

      From “James Gandon and His Times”, by Hugo Duffy:
      “The distinguished architect whose life we now commence was bore in London on the 29th of Febuary, 1742”
      But I’m sure you knew that, johnglas, I apologise if I have offended your sensibilities, but I do not have interest in, nor was not refering to the wider political implications, nor was I citing it as a negative thing. Regardless of who was or wasn’t in power, or who was being repressed (and I am familiar with our own history), Gandon was born in England, therefore a British citizen, like Lord Foster, who, and there is little to argue with here, effectively built all the most important civic buildings of 18th C Dublin, ie those buildings of that period that represent Dublin on postcards, and aside from those few iconic examples, the majority of Dublin’s finest building stock of the same period is British import, albeit tempered with some Irish sensibilities, and prior to that the Brits had probably imported or adapted that from somewhere else.

    • #750716
      johnglas
      Participant

      Ok spoil-sport: points all taken, but as a famous Irishman (allegedly) said: ‘Because you are born in a stable, doesn’t make you a horse’!

    • #750717
      tfarmer
      Participant

      17 years of boom…. in dubai they build the burj tower, in dublin they build a large spike protruging out of the ground….never have anyone tell you we irish lack ambition..

    • #750718
      shanekeane
      Participant

      @spoil_sport wrote:

      I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, “interesting” does not make good, and yes, to suggest that something meerly “interesting” is good enough, is infact beneath the dignity of Dublin. I am not defending the shit in the docklands, but if you take a 6/7 standard issue, lowest common denominator, docklands style facade and extrude it another 20 stories, it will not really improve matters, the Docklands is not shit simply because it is not highrise, there are far more core and qualitive reasons. There is nothing wrong with highrise, with towers, Dublin has a tradition of towers and landmarks, church spires and domes closing vistas, the chimneys of Guinness, Liberty Hall, etc, I would welcome the U2 tower, albeit without the “U2” and perhaps not a Foster (although, there is strangley a nice balance that Dublin’s most important buildings of the 18C, Customs House, Four Courts, were also designed by a Brit)

      I disagree. In a city as architecturally boring as Dublin, interesting is good. Even if it does nothing else, at least some interesting architecture might shake things up a bit. If, instead of what was built there, the docklands took a risk on interesting and possibly bad, then I think it might be a lot better than dull and mediocre. And in a ridiculously conservative and increasingly drab city like Dublin, high rise is interesting.

      A big problem is that Dubliners think that Dublin belongs to them. They don’t want high rise in what a lot of small-minded locals think is still the little backwater that Dublin used to be. It doesn’t belong to them. It belongs to the people of Ireland, just like Washington DC belongs to the people of America. And it has a responsibility to create a city which represents the ambition and imagination of Irish people as a whole. It has a responsibility to be a metropolis full of interest and culture of which we can all be proud. And that’s why every little nimby who complains about high rise in Dublin should be ignored. Because it’s not just about the high rise, it’s about the attitude in general. They need to be SHUT UP, with an iron fist if necessary.

    • #750719
      spoil_sport
      Participant

      “architecturally boring as Dublin”
      Its no Venice or NYC, granted but we have already had this discussion, the architectural merits of Dublin unfortunately do not normally reveal thenmselves to those of short attention spans, most of its most interesting moments are hidden and subtle, and rely not on a single “landmark” building, but rather a wider composition, an appreciation of the city as a stage set. I would hope that the “ambition and imagination of irish people as a whole” deserves better than to be boiled down to an “interesting building”, or pop culture, disposable architecture.
      I really don’t get you. You write something mildly profound; Dublin belongs ot the people, etc, OK, a bit too Barak Obama for my liking (Don’t get me wrong, I love the guy, but there is only one) but I’ll alow it, and then you go Michael O’ Leary on it.

      P.S: And for the record I’m not defending the shit that has been built in the docklands, I’m not anti-highrise and I’m not from Dublin.

    • #750720
      GrahamH
      Participant

      Well put spoil_sport. And shanekeane, since when have ‘the people of Ireland’ ever shown ownership of Dublin? Aside from using it as a personal Monopoly board to carve up according to their own whims over the past 50 years, traditionally there has been close to zero interest in the city other than amongst those who live in it.

      I suppose capitals worldwide tend to be the butt of jealousies and a certain degree of resentment, but we take it to a whole new level in this country. A little more lovin’ from these peoples Dublin represents wouldn’t go amiss before making pronouncements on its essential character.

    • #750721
      missarchi
      Participant

      my whole theory is the Irish don’t want to become involved in world war 3 by attracting attention with tall buildings.

    • #750722
      cgcsb
      Participant

      @tfarmer wrote:

      17 years of boom…. in dubai they build the burj tower, in dublin they build a large spike protruging out of the ground….never have anyone tell you we irish lack ambition..

      the workers who built Burj Dubai and all of their other towers are baisically slave labour. That’s how they can build so quickly and with so little regard for site safety or what they demolish along the way. Have you been to Dubai recently? have you seen the shanty towns? the slums that surround the city, the UAE Govt. would prefere you didn’t see them. I’d rather live in a country with no highrises than a country with no freedom

    • #750723
      tfarmer
      Participant

      @cgcsb wrote:

      the workers who built Burj Dubai and all of their other towers are baisically slave labour. That’s how they can build so quickly and with so little regard for site safety or what they demolish along the way. Have you been to Dubai recently? have you seen the shanty towns? the slums that surround the city, the UAE Govt. would prefere you didn’t see them. I’d rather live in a country with no highrises than a country with no freedom

      Oh come on now we have our fair share of urban slums here too in what is rapidly becoming a welfare society of 2 tiers, the super rich elite class and the ‘slum dogs’ to coin your phrase. Also freedom is a very all encompassing word don’t you think?, we should trademark that word. I’m sure the people in UAE have had enough of hypocritical westerners telling them of ‘freedom’ meanwhile we show how greedy and corrupt we are with our unbridled greed, bailouts, economic collapse, creation of a welfare state and the top greedy exec’s and ceo’s resigning in droves with their millions. As the late great george carlin once said of western society, Your free, free to make s(((y small decisions like what cigarettes you can buy, what color car you can have, what magazine you can read, but beneath it all your still a slave to corporate capitalism, one with little to no power in the real decision making which runs your life. Freedom my arse..

    • #750724
      jdivision
      Participant

      @tfarmer wrote:

      Oh come on now we have our fair share of urban slums here too in what is rapidly becoming a welfare society of 2 tiers, the super rich elite class and the ‘slum dogs’ to coin your phrase. Also freedom is a very all encompassing word don’t you think?, we should trademark that word. I’m sure the people in UAE have had enough of hypocritical westerners telling them of ‘freedom’ meanwhile we show how greedy and corrupt we are with our unbridled greed, bailouts, economic collapse, creation of a welfare state and the top greedy exec’s and ceo’s resigning in droves with their millions. As the late great george carlin once said of western society, Your free, free to make s(((y small decisions like what cigarettes you can buy, what color car you can have, what magazine you can read, but beneath it all your still a slave to corporate capitalism, one with little to no power in the real decision making which runs your life. Freedom my arse..

      40c an hour, your passport taken away and only immigrant labour being treated like that is essentially slave labour tfarmer. The people of the UAE aren’t treated like that. you’re not perhance BostonorBerlin

    • #750725
      rob mc
      Participant

      @tfarmer wrote:

      Oh come on now we have our fair share of urban slums here too in what is rapidly becoming a welfare society of 2 tiers, the super rich elite class and the ‘slum dogs’ to coin your phrase. Also freedom is a very all encompassing word don’t you think?, we should trademark that word. I’m sure the people in UAE have had enough of hypocritical westerners telling them of ‘freedom’ meanwhile we show how greedy and corrupt we are with our unbridled greed, bailouts, economic collapse, creation of a welfare state and the top greedy exec’s and ceo’s resigning in droves with their millions. As the late great george carlin once said of western society, Your free, free to make s(((y small decisions like what cigarettes you can buy, what color car you can have, what magazine you can read, but beneath it all your still a slave to corporate capitalism, one with little to no power in the real decision making which runs your life. Freedom my arse..

      Oh come its a bit different, half the population may live in 60 story skyscrapers but the rest live in shanty towns.And the worst “urban slums” as you say, in Ireland wouldn’t compare to how terrible the conditions are for these people.

      These shieks have so much money that they have nothing else to do but build a theme park, for themselves and for there rich friends. So lets quit comparing Ireland, a country that actualy has to consider its people in its decisions, to Dubai a country driven by slave labour and SHIT loads of money.

    • #750726
      cgcsb
      Participant

      @tfarmer wrote:

      Oh come on now we have our fair share of urban slums here too in what is rapidly becoming a welfare society of 2 tiers, the super rich elite class and the ‘slum dogs’ to coin your phrase.

      Irish ‘slums’ have heating, electricity, a front door etc, Middle eastern slums are tin huts.

      @tfarmer wrote:

      Also freedom is a very all encompassing word don’t you think?, we should trademark that word. I’m sure the people in UAE have had enough of hypocritical westerners telling them of ‘freedom’ meanwhile we show how greedy and corrupt we are with our unbridled greed, bailouts, economic collapse, creation of a welfare state and the top greedy exec’s and ceo’s resigning in droves with their millions. As the late great george carlin once said of western society, Your free, free to make s(((y small decisions like what cigarettes you can buy, what color car you can have, what magazine you can read, but beneath it all your still a slave to corporate capitalism, one with little to no power in the real decision making which runs your life. Freedom my arse..

      Spoken like a true hippie, if you feel like your a slave to greedy corporations, try living in Dubai where greedy corporations literaly have slaves working on building sites for almost no money. Also Women are property and cannot vote, homosexuals get the death penalty, sex outside of marriage is a federal crime (14 years in prison) and inmagrants are not protected under the law and suffer intimidation by police. Alas I don’t think that is a country that we should look up to in any respect.

    • #750727
      tfarmer
      Participant

      @cgcsb wrote:

      Irish ‘slums’ have heating, electricity, a front door etc, Middle eastern slums are tin huts.

      Spoken like a true hippie, if you feel like your a slave to greedy corporations, try living in Dubai where greedy corporations literaly have slaves working on building sites for almost no money. Also Women are property and cannot vote, homosexuals get the death penalty, sex outside of marriage is a federal crime (14 years in prison) and inmagrants are not protected under the law and suffer intimidation by police. Alas I don’t think that is a country that we should look up to in any respect.

      Spoken like a true hippie? what is that supposed to mean? So anyone who has an opinion which differs from you is a hippie? You must great fun at social gatherings.

      Here we go with the women can’t vote or drive and they chop heads and hands off and they are out to get you etc… too much fox news you’ve been watching there, me thinks. Lived over in the UAE for years so your preaching to the choir. I always notice the most ignorant misinformed people are the people that never travel and experience other cultures and countries. They have a paranoid and aggressive tone about other countries and state with certainty their knowledge of that country. Such imo is the folly of an ignorant and truely uniformed mind.

      This country you are speaking of, you must be confusing it with iraq. Don’t always rely on wikipedia for your facts, thats the best advice i can give you. You know they have the death penalty in the usa too. . And you know the capital punishment thing not such a bad idea, they get very little crime and people running around in gangs shooting other gangs to death in mid day traffic like over here. Put a poll to the irish about capital punishment to criminals and see what reaction you’d get.

      And even if it was happening that is their religion over there you know, they have a right to do anything they want, just as you have a right to choose your religion and what government rules you. Comparing Ireland and the UAE in terms of culture in relation to architecture is a mute point.

      The slave trade has operated in the middle east for centuries. Its part of their culture much as the caste system is part of the culture of the subcontinent of india. And we are all slaves including you. This is the point im making. You are a slave to corporations. The entire western world is. Its just european arrogance that makes you think that you are somehow free, something special, above others in other parts of the world, that because you abandoned capital punishment and you let women drive you are ‘morally superior’. Sure it’s obvious by the tone of your posts thats the way you think.

      Maybe the current economic collapse will sort a few things out for you and make you see the reality of the entire western capitalist system and how its just modern serfdom, with it’s ever shrinking middle class and the superrich and powerful who control them. So what you’ll end up with is an elite and a lower class.

      Sure you get to choose what car, what color ipod you get to choose what magazine you can buy, but you are living under the control of the corporate masters and financiers who run everything and dictate everything. Everything is a distraction to keep you asleep. Western societies are crime ridden,plauged with social problems, there is no sense of community or family values and now economic collapse is coming. If what happened in Iceland or Greece recently doesn’t register with your subconscious then your in for a surprise.

      You need to fill out paperwork just to take a s&& nowadays. Orweillian indeed. What could be more corrupt then the international bankers who destroy an entire financial system then spend the bailout money given by taxpayers to pay themselves and their minions off. You really think your in safe hands? They’re coming for your savings and pensions next, watch for it,soon as the next round of bailouts fail yet again. Your not free, you never were, capitalism is the perfect socialist agenda in play. It gives you the illusion your free, that you have choice and judging from most people they fall for it hook line and sinker. Throw them a few bones here and there and they’re happy.

      At least in the middle east they do these things out in the open and let you see who they are

      ponder on that.

    • #750728
      ctesiphon
      Participant

      @tfarmer wrote:

      And we are all slaves including you. This is the point im making.

      Everything is a distraction to keep you asleep.

      It gives you the illusion your free, that you have choice and judging from most people they fall for it hook line and sinker.

      ponder on that.

      Remember that all I am offering is the truth. Nothing more.

    • #750729
      shanekeane
      Participant

      So, in that case, what is freedom?

    • #750730
      spoil_sport
      Participant

      “The slave trade has operated in the middle east for centuries. Its part of their culture…”
      And that makes it ok? Britain could claim the slave trade was part of its culture for centuries too.

      “You are a slave to corporations”
      That’s hippie speak if ever I heard it… Of course the “corporations” are in control, you say that like you are trying to teach us something, like you are the first person to discover it, like you have just figured out all for yourself that santa isn’t real and your trying to convince all the grown ups of the huge conspiracy. Of course the corporations are in control, if they wern’t who would be? Its a simple concept called hierarchy, check it out, its been around for some time now. The historical equilivent is religion, it told people how to live, how to be better people, what they should wear, what they can and can’t say. It is the basic organising principal of society, it’s what kept society together, its what led them into wars against other variations of the same theme. And yes unfortunately, some people are better than others, some people are faster, some are smarter, there is, by natural selection, no such thing as equality. But in the western world, religion is redundant (massive generalisation, granted) so someone has to take control; the corporations tell me what is cool to wear, what is cool to say, what is cool to have or have-not. OK, so we take down the corporations, then what?

      But the relevance of all this to the U2 tower being made taller is?

    • #750731
      constat
      Participant

      @spoil_sport wrote:

      “The slave trade has operated in the middle east for centuries. Its part of their culture…”
      And that makes it ok? Britain could claim the slave trade was part of its culture for centuries too.

      “You are a slave to corporations”
      That’s hippie speak if ever I heard it… Of course the “corporations” are in control, you say that like you are trying to teach us something, like you are the first person to discover it, like you have just figured out all for yourself that santa isn’t real and your trying to convince all the grown ups of the huge conspiracy. Of course the corporations are in control, if they wern’t who would be? Its a simple concept called hierarchy, check it out, its been around for some time now. The historical equilivent is religion, it told people how to live, how to be better people, what they should wear, what they can and can’t say. It is the basic organising principal of society, it’s what kept society together, its what led them into wars against other variations of the same theme. And yes unfortunately, some people are better than others, some people are faster, some are smarter, there is, by natural selection, no such thing as equality. But in the western world, religion is redundant (massive generalisation, granted) so someone has to take control; the corporations tell me what is cool to wear, what is cool to say, what is cool to have or have-not. OK, so we take down the corporations, then what?

      But the relevance of all this to the U2 tower being made taller is?

      Bravo!!

    • #750732
      fergalr
      Participant

      Has Archiseek been taken over by Indymedia..? :confused:

    • #750733
      hutton
      Participant

      @fergalr wrote:

      Has Archiseek been taken over by Indymedia..? :confused:

      Splitter! 😡

    • #750734
      MD199
      Participant

      I wouldn’t be surprised if this was the subject of another tribunal, along with Landsdowne Road. Up until now, there has not been anyone willing to call up the relevant authorities on the blatant conflicts of interest on both these projects in the appointment of the advisors and the preferred bidders. I reckon now that there is little or no good reason for people to try and stay on the “good” side of these “authorities” that people will start to question the decisions made. Clear and unambiguous conflicts existed in both cases, and would have been questionable at the very least under European Competition laws. The problem was that no one wanted to be the whistle blower. Now that the bid fees invovled could solve some issues for some of the unsuccessful bidders (circa €1-2m per bid), they might pursue them for this.
      I personally would encourage an enquiry into the practices of the DDDA. They were established as an authority to serve the people of Dublin and in particular the environs of the Docklands. Whilst there has been great development in the area made possible by the establishment of the DDDA and the masterplan model in place, there have been questionable levels of competance shown in the delivery of the design competitions run, and in the bending of their own rules in order to suit their own purposes (Liam Carroll’s planning that was recently ruled to be outside the DDDA’s authority to grant).

    • #750735
      jdivision
      Participant

      DDDA travel expenses and board fees cost €530,000

      Former Anglo Irish Bank executives among those to benefit
      The Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) racked up more than €530,000 on travel expenses for executives, board members and staff, together with fees for board members, between 2006 and 2008.

      http://www.tribune.ie/business/article/2009/feb/08/ddda-travel-expenses-and-board-fees-cost-530000/

    • #750736
      MD199
      Participant

      At the end of that article it says the DDDA never received any government funding. Whilst this is true, it has received the proceeds of the sale of what are esentially state assets in the form of land. It also acquired a stock of social and affordable housing, which it no doubt received some remuneration for when selling (the affordable elements at least). Not only this though, but they are a public body and the planning authority for the area, and in the case of the glass bottle site, they reinvested money’s which were gathered through the sale of state property etc, in a partnership on the glass bottle site. This is a clear conflict, and should be outside their remit and ability. Its like allowing a developer to by a planning authority and basically build what he likes. It completely blurs the lines between private commerce and governance/regulation.

    • #750737
      MD199
      Participant

      @johnny21 wrote:

      Which proposal is better??? The original or recent proposal??? Found a render of original proposal…..looks great but so does the norman foster proposal!!! Which would you pick???:confused:

      [ATTACH]8828[/ATTACH][ATTACH]8829[/ATTACH]

      I have some great CGI’s of one of the bids, if anyone’s interested?

    • #750738
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Go on, post them

    • #750739
      kceire
      Participant

      @MD199 wrote:

      I have some great CGI’s of one of the bids, if anyone’s interested?

      yes, post them up please 🙂

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