1912 – AIB, South Mall, Cork
Distinctive and imposing bank building on a prominent site, in the main financial district of Cork.
Distinctive and imposing bank building on a prominent site, in the main financial district of Cork.
Constructed as a Picture Theatre, the Coliseum remained in use until the 1970s.
Designed by Edward W. Pugin and George Ashlin, this magnificent cathedral, which dominates Cork Harbour from land and sea,
Unbuilt proposal for a new mineral baths spa building at Lisdoonvarna, Co. Clare.
There was a brewery on this site as far back as the 17th century and before that a monastery.
The extensive premises of Sutton’s merchants, South Mall and Morrison’s Quay, burned down in 1963.
In the early twentieth century, most Irish towns had several banks. Over the years, a series of mergers resulted in the group AIB being created,
Formerly the site of the Munster Arcade, the building was designed by Robert Walker for Robertson Leslie Ferguson,
After the city centre of Cork was burned in December 1920, by a fire set by the Black and Tans as retribution for republican attacks,
Replacing an earlier department store that was burned down in 1920 along with most of this part of St.