1907 – Unbuilt design for Church, Timoleague, Co. Cork
Competition entry to design a new Roman Catholic Church for Timoleague. Exhibited at RHA.
Competition entry to design a new Roman Catholic Church for Timoleague. Exhibited at RHA.
Unusually designed buildings along Pearse Square dating from 1908 which show some Art Nouveau influences yet with the incredibly narrow facades resemble buildings from Amsterdam canal-banks.
Fine imposing building looking down Pearse Square from Patrick Street. Has changed little from old postcards yet seems strangely unloved and uncared for.
The Church of the Sacred Heart was built in an imposing Gothic Revival style in 1907-1911 on the site of an earlier 19th century chapel.
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,
There was a brewery on this site as far back as the 17th century and before that a monastery.
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,