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Dublin - The Home Of Poor Design

  • 05-10-2020 1:26pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,200 ✭✭✭


    Why is it that design is of such poor quality in Dublin.

    Two areas in particular stick out to me:

    1) Apartment buildings.

    A bit of faux brick face here, a bit of salmon paint finish there, a bit of timber that will or won't weather, a metal balcony that is guaranteed to discolour or need to be painted even though its not designed to be painted.

    We'll throw in some cream paint finish there just to jumble it up a bit.

    Then we will put in some unutilisable space, why not.

    2) Public space.

    New public spaces are nearly all uniformly bad, Grafton Street, Henry Street.

    The price of works on both areas was unbelievable.

    What are you left with, dark stone that chips.

    The new squares that have been developed in recent years, Barnardo Square, next to City Hall; and Store Street, in front of Store Street Garda Station.

    Both are cold, uncomfortable, not appealing to the eye, and sharp.


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,478 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    Never mind endless drab semi D suburbs with no proper communal hubs or villages. The whole place is a bit of a mess.


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    And?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,485 ✭✭✭KevRossi


    The apartments here are dire, there isn't one built in the last 20 years that I'd keep.

    But when you have this model of drabness at the entrance to the port, it's obvious architecture has very little imagination here, or at least those with ideas are not allowed to express them. How much better would that look if they had a Hundertwasser building there.

    But then again the planners said this piece of insignificant nonsense was good in front of Dublin Castle on a street with the potential of Dame St.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,797 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    The local authorities who approve or not approve couldn’t give a rats ass. Probably take direction from the FG mob to go easy and facilitate ‘business’ ie. the builders and developers.

    There is a monstrosity going up near my folks place to again facilitate students at the nearby college no doubt. A towering four bedroom structure no way in keeping with the houses surrounding it, either size or design, already blocking the evening light. There were four objections that I know of, none of which were upheld..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,818 ✭✭✭donvito99


    Strumms wrote: »
    The local authorities who approve or not approve couldn’t give a rats ass. Probably take direction from the FG mob to go easy and facilitate ‘business’ ie. the builders and developers.

    There is a monstrosity going up near my folks place to again facilitate students at the nearby college no doubt. A towering four bedroom structure no way in keeping with the houses surrounding it, either size or design, already blocking the evening light. There were four objections that I know of, none of which were upheld..

    wut

    Also the 'FG mob' as you put it are quite prepared to kowtow to you, your parents and other NIMBYs, strangle development and drive up the costs of same. This has forced the city to sprawl and is likely one of the reasons why the public realm and the quality of certain accommodation in the city centre is so poor.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,797 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    donvito99 wrote: »
    wut

    Also the 'FG mob' as you put it are quite prepared to kowtow to you, your parents and other NIMBYs, strangle development and drive up the costs of same. This has forced the city to sprawl and is likely one of the reasons why the public realm and the quality of certain accommodation in the city centre is so poor.

    Nobody is trying to strangle developers or development here. They are simply availing of their legal right to appeal planning for a development that there are several issues with. Their neighbors agree.

    The ‘quality’ is so poor because developers and builders want maximum return for poor design and cheap build quality. No other reason... $£$£

    My parents certainly wouldn’t be of a NIMBY attitude, the opposite in fact. It’s disingenuous of you to suggest otherwise on the basis of being told that they and others appealed a planning application but sure you know that. :)


  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I was just talking to a friend about this last night. My apartment while relatively new really isn't fit for purpose.

    Who ever designed it had never lived in an apartment before. A few annoyances:

    - The bathroom is much bigger than the kitchen. I spend much longer daily in the kitchen.
    - The kitchen has no door to it, so I can't run the washing machine during the day if working from home due to the noise, or in the evening as I then can't hear the TV.
    - Storage is sparse.
    - Severe lack of plug sockets.
    - Its a two bed apartment but really, its a 1.5 bed apartment as the box room can just fit a single bed.
    - The balcony is unusable 6+ months of the year. If instead of a balcony, it was somewhat enclosed you could use it as a sunroom/outside storage in winter.
    - Also, the management company send letters regularly reminding us we are not to dry clothes on the balcony so again I have to ask, whats the point of it?
    - considering space is so limited and the fact I very rarely take a bath, a walk in shower would save so much space.
    - Finally, noise insulation is appalling. I can hear the mobile phone vibrations of my neighbour one floor above me.

    Edit: Oh yeah no room for a dining table. Not even a two person one.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,797 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    I was just talking to a friend about this last night. My apartment while relatively new really isn't fit for purpose.

    Who ever designed it had never lived in an apartment before. A few annoyances:

    - The bathroom is much bigger than the kitchen. I spend much longer daily in the kitchen.
    - The kitchen has no door to it, so I can't run the washing machine during the day if working from home due to the noise, or in the evening as I then can't hear the TV.
    - Storage is sparse.
    - Severe lack of plug sockets.
    - Its a two bed apartment but really, its a 1.5 bed apartment as the box room can just fit a single bed.
    - The balcony is unusable 6+ months of the year. If instead of a balcony, it was somewhat enclosed you could use it as a sunroom/outside storage in winter.
    - Also, the management company send letters regularly reminding us we are not to dry clothes on the balcony so again I have to ask, whats the point of it?
    - considering space is so limited and the fact I very rarely take a bath, a walk in shower would save so much space.
    - Finally, noise insulation is appalling. I can hear the mobile phone vibrations of my neighbour one floor above me.

    Edit: Oh yeah no room for a dining table. Not even a two person one.

    Simply built with the wellbeing, comforts and quality of the developers bank account in mind. Not you who ended up living there. There just doesn’t seem to be any effective cover or standards for the property purchaser.

    Be nice and proper if after 3 months or whatever of living there and the problems were manifesting themselves you could go to a government agency and say “look, can you have a look at this build and issue A, B and C”... I presume planning department have no interest post build ? But if somebody ie. Government agency had, and they in turn could remove say the ability to build of a developer / builder for two years... that’s a pretty sizable deterrent for any and all cowboys. Just any planning they are attached to directly or otherwise, refused without consideration.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,568 ✭✭✭Chinasea


    Add to all this, no greenery and no both public and private tree planting. Filthy gray paths and public bins crying out for some regular power hosing.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,761 ✭✭✭AngryLips


    - Storage is sparse.


    It's either not that new or the storage isn't that sparse, because new apartments are required to maintain a ratio of storage space to living space.


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  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    AngryLips wrote: »
    It's either not that new or the storage isn't that sparse, because new apartments are required to maintain a ratio of storage space to living space.


    It's relatively new compared to some of the Georgian era townhouses converted into apartments(read flats) some of my friends live in.



    When did that legislation come in?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,688 ✭✭✭✭Muahahaha


    imme wrote: »
    Why is it that design is of such poor quality in Dublin.

    Two areas in particular stick out to me:

    1) Apartment buildings.

    A bit of faux brick face here, a bit of salmon paint finish there, a bit of timber that will or won't weather, a metal balcony that is guaranteed to discolour or need to be painted even though its not designed to be painted.

    Yeah would agree the standard of apartments is dire and its getting worse. To illustrate this take a look at Clancy Quay in Islandbridge. Back in 2010 it was bought by the American fund Kennedy Wilson and they began phase 1 by the river. Those first five or six blocks weren't great but they weren't bad either. Now roll on 10 years and the other phases and it is obvious that Kennedy Wilson have sussed out how to build cheap crap and maximise their returns. The apartment blocks in the latest phase next to the N4/Kilmainham junction are terrible, especially the balconies- they have cheaped out by installing this giant metal structure for all the balconies and then attaching it to the building. It looks totally out of place now when brand new and give it a few years and it will be dreadful.
    KevRossi wrote: »
    The apartments here are dire, there isn't one built in the last 20 years that I'd keep.

    But when you have this model of drabness at the entrance to the port, it's obvious architecture has very little imagination here, or at least those with ideas are not allowed to express them. How much better would that look if they had a Hundertwasser building there.

    I pass that building at the entrance to the port every couple of weeks and each and every time I do I shake my head on what was a massive missed opportunity to put a landmark building of architectural merit on that prime location. Instead what we are left with for the next 100 years is a completely featureless and non-descript building that serves only as a symbol of Dublins blandness. I dont know who the developer there was but they didnt care about leaving a legacy, it was all about getting a tall building for the cheapest cost possible. Its criminal that the planners let them away with it.

    Its funny I was over in London in the summer and down on Lime Street to take a look at the Lloyds building. Its a superb piece of architecture and even though everything around it is now dwarfing it in height it still stands out as a great piece of work. And then you learn that it was constructed in 1978, 42 years ago. It really has stood the test of time and in another 50 years time it will still look great. All the tall builings in that part of London have architectural merit to them which doesnt happen by accident, it happens by design with the planners telling developers that if they want to build a skyscraper they better spend a few quid show some innovation and good design. Whereas here in Dublin the planners just let developers get away with building any old cheap sh1te, just chuck it up, be grand. There is no foresight whatsoever that these crap buildings are now with us for lifetimes ahead.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,608 ✭✭✭IngazZagni


    Muahahaha wrote: »
    Yeah would agree the standard of apartments is dire and its getting worse. To illustrate this take a look at Clancy Quay in Islandbridge. Back in 2010 it was bought by the American fund Kennedy Wilson and they began phase 1 by the river. Those first five or six blocks weren't great but they weren't bad either. Now roll on 10 years and the other phases and it is obvious that Kennedy Wilson have sussed out how to build cheap crap and maximise their returns. The apartment blocks in the latest phase next to the N4/Kilmainham junction are terrible, especially the balconies- they have cheaped out by installing this giant metal structure for all the balconies and then attaching it to the building. It looks totally out of place now when brand new and give it a few years and it will be dreadful.

    I agree with the apartment blocks facing the N4. They are a poor design and in particular the balconies make them look hideous. However you should really take a look around the rest of that development. It is superb. Such excellent design and quirky little features. It isn't a thoroughfare though and will not be seen by most. Perhaps a case of dont judge a book by its cover.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,333 ✭✭✭tampopo


    IngazZagni wrote: »
    I agree with the apartment blocks facing the N4. They are a poor design and in particular the balconies make them look hideous. However you should really take a look around the rest of that development. It is superb. Such excellent design and quirky little features. It isn't a thoroughfare though and will not be seen by most. Perhaps a case of dont judge a book by its cover.

    Looks like a prison, tbh


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    imme wrote: »
    Why is it that design is of such poor quality in Dublin.

    ...

    Not just Dublin. Ireland.

    I wonder is it because good design is expensive. Pretty much everything in Ireland is overpriced. So there isn't the budget for design.

    I think as a society we've driven out any appreciation of design except in niche areas. Maybe that's also happened in architecture schools.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,688 ✭✭✭✭Muahahaha


    IngazZagni wrote: »
    I agree with the apartment blocks facing the N4. They are a poor design and in particular the balconies make them look hideous. However you should really take a look around the rest of that development. It is superb. Such excellent design and quirky little features. It isn't a thoroughfare though and will not be seen by most. Perhaps a case of dont judge a book by its cover.

    Fair enough, I havent been inside the development itself. But I was making the point that the apartments built in phase 1 down by the river back in 2010-ish look decent enough whereas the ones built facing the N4 in the latest phase look hideous. My theory is Kennedy Wilson were putting a bit of effort in back in 2010 but now in 2020 they have figured out they can get away with any old sh1te from the planners. Those metal balconies on the ones facing the N4 look awful, as someone said it looks like a prison. I must take a walk in sometime though to see what the whole place looks like.

    Either way I think the overall point of the OP is correct, in terms of apartment building there is loads of crap being thrown up everywhere. Many of them look dreadful when new so in 10 or 15 years time they're going to be eyesores.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I live in an apartment in an award-winning mixed leafy estate of housing/apartment blocks, on a former religious order site. The architects office is on the estate so they have to look at their work every day, which helped with the design. Pet ownership is an accepted part of living in the apartments, with dog waste disposal unit in the parkland. The kitchen was open plan and useless before I got it walked off and fitted with useful shelving. Both bedrooms are ample and I have a decent sized living room where my large dining table fits in nicely. There is a small storage room within the apartment, but the underground car park was not well designed, and for family/active living storage units ought to have been provided at the outset for sports items, outdoorsy stuff etc. They are trying to figure out a way retrospectively provide locker units now. They did get a lot right in my estate and I'm very lucky to be living here, but way more such living spaces are needed in Dublin and with more forethought for all the practical needs of folk living in them. They need to be places you can call home, not just lodge in for a few years. Goodness knows these times we are getting to know our dwelling environment all too well.


  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I live in an apartment in an award-winning mixed leafy estate of housing/apartment blocks, on a former religious order site. The architects office is on the estate so they have to look at their work every day, which helped with the design. Pet ownership is an accepted part of living in the apartments, with dog waste disposal unit in the parkland. The kitchen was open plan and useless before I got it walked off and fitted with useful shelving. Both bedrooms are ample and I have a decent sized living room where my large dining table fits in nicely. There is a small storage room within the apartment, but the underground car park was not well designed, and for family/active living storage units ought to have been provided at the outset for sports items, outdoorsy stuff etc. They are trying to figure out a way retrospectively provide locker units now. They did get a lot right in my estate and I'm very lucky to be living here, but way more such living spaces are needed in Dublin and with more forethought for all the practical needs of folk living in them. They need to be places you can call home, not just lodge in for a few years. Goodness knows these times we are getting to know our dwelling environment all too well.


    Where is this Shangri La?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,194 ✭✭✭Andrewf20


    I think the quays in dublin generally look pretty class. Lots of interesting architecture as a whole.

    Appartments a pain all right. No kitchen door a pain. A bath is not space efficient but easier if you have kids I find.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Where is this Shangri La?

    Google OMP who have their HQ on the estate ;)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,200 ✭✭✭imme


    beauf wrote: »
    Not just Dublin. Ireland.

    I wonder is it because good design is expensive. Pretty much everything in Ireland is overpriced. So there isn't the budget for design.

    I think as a society we've driven out any appreciation of design except in niche areas. Maybe that's also happened in architecture schools.

    Everything has to be designed.

    Even badly designed buildings have to be designed.

    Architecture is a computer program these days. That is also part of the problem.

    I think people, where ever they live want and need good design.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,200 ✭✭✭imme


    Google OMP who have their HQ on the estate ;)

    I think this development is an exception because of the location, cost of the development, reputation of the architects.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    This is my estate, with its nice parkland design. Doggy waste bin visible. My window overlooks a pond with fountains. When I arrived towards the end of the Celtic Tiger there were 5 fountains, but since the recession that was cut-back to 3. The ducks have long since abandoned the pond too, but the huge prevalence of foxes on the estate may account for that.


  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    This is my estate, with its nice parkland design. Doggy waste bin visible. My window overlooks a pond with fountains. When I arrived towards the end of the Celtic Tiger there were 5 fountains, but since the recession that was cut-back to 3. The ducks have long since abandoned the pond too, but the huge prevalence of foxes on the estate may account for that.

    Looks lovely!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,688 ✭✭✭✭Muahahaha


    Looks gorgeous Cat. The southside does have some really nice apartment developments, I suppose because prices are a fair bit higher the developers have to put in more effort. But aside from that it sounds (and looks) like you've a good management company to keep the landscaping well. That isnt always the case in apartment developments, especially when a majority of apartments are owned by investors.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,648 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    imme wrote: »
    Everything has to be designed.

    Even badly designed buildings have to be designed.

    Architecture is a computer program these days. That is also part of the problem.

    I think people, where ever they live want and need good design.

    You can't design something if you are tone deaf to design.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,287 ✭✭✭Niallof9


    Strumms wrote: »
    The local authorities who approve or not approve couldn’t give a rats ass. Probably take direction from the FG mob to go easy and facilitate ‘business’ ie. the builders and developers.

    There is a monstrosity going up near my folks place to again facilitate students at the nearby college no doubt. A towering four bedroom structure no way in keeping with the houses surrounding it, either size or design, already blocking the evening light. There were four objections that I know of, none of which were upheld..

    people like yourself are the exact reason people like the OP can have these complaints. why would anybody build anything remarkable when there's people giving out about four storey buildings. People really need to actively walk the whole city and take it all in and then judge. I'm talking about seeing it from Swords to Sandyford, some of the worst stuff isn't modern. Most of the crappy architecture comes about because of nimbysim and the outrageous delays planning can have. Look up the history of the Ulster bank building in town. The Cosgraves had another beautiful 25 storey glass building refused, but they had old planning permission for the darker one that stands today much to DCC's dismay. Nimbys, an taisce, DCC, the Gerogian society, ABP, have this city ruined. Much of the Docklands will need to be rebuilt at some stage. and it wasn't FG who did this. the ringsend protests in 1999 against de high rise were facilitated by the same people of the ringsend protests last month. Your left leaning politicans and people scared of change. People complained about the reconstruction of 19th century Paris and the Dublin wide street comission. GO figure.

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/docklands-high-rise-schemes-threatened-by-ruling-1.207940?mode=sample&auth-failed=1&pw-origin=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.irishtimes.com%2Fnews%2Fdocklands-high-rise-schemes-threatened-by-ruling-1.207940

    https://www.thejournal.ie/dublin-ringsend-york-road-development-5167429-Aug2020/


  • Registered Users Posts: 230 ✭✭bocaman


    Lets face facts, compared to other European capitals Dublin is actually a very ugly city. Whose fault is that? The politicians, the city councillors, the planning authority, Dublin City Council itself. Dublin just isn't fit for purpose. Most apartments are an utter disgrace with little or no regard for the people who live in them or the space around them.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,287 ✭✭✭Niallof9


    bocaman wrote: »
    Lets face facts, compared to other European capitals Dublin is actually a very ugly city. Whose fault is that? The politicians, the city councillors, the planning authority, Dublin City Council itself. Dublin just isn't fit for purpose. Most apartments are an utter disgrace with little or no regard for the people who live in them or the space around them.

    it is and isn't. Some of the constraints are the fact that the city is built on medieval and 18th century infrastructure. and any big picture thinking is refused outright. Look at the eastern bypass for example. If you don't want that then you have packed quays and a antiquated city road network. If you don't want highrise then you have to settle for blocky square apartment buildings and offices. IF you want to preserve every old thing because of posterity then be prepared to live with them when they are rack and ruin due to upkeep costs. Dublin infuriates me at times.

    For me some simple and not so simple ideas, and perhaps costly measures. A city market in the Iveagh or fruit markets. metro. Liffey cycle way even on the bloody side of it if possible. A liffey water taxi service. A bridge, tunnel over the tolka estuary. A remapping of the docks and how its organised, some of it such wasted space and potential. A complete break with the idea of North and South Dublin as two seprate identities. An Eastern bypass. High rise where appropriate. Eastpoint leveled and rebuilt. Some more reclamation of the sea like in the past. An honest appraisal of our city and civic spaces and what we want and need for them. An appreciation that Dublin is a city with sea and mountains and the benefits of that. An appreciation of our history but realising that no city can afford to become a museum. Better marketing and connection with under appreciated towns outside the city - Chapilizod, skerries, rush, lusk, malahide.

    the reality of Dublin is that it has improved beyond measure. Its glory years were the 18th century, we aren't going back to that. Its fallen years were possibly after the regeneration of the 60's. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0p8e1MUC0E

    Its got back to being a very liveable mid sized European capital city. Its no longer some sort of provincial hub.

    I mean here is an example from one of our most famous architects dealing with this sort of provincial ****e -

    Kevin Roche, a winner of the Pritzker Prize and the man behind Dublin's Convention Centre, said: "It is certainly possible to build taller buildings and still maintain the integrity of a city.

    "If it is built with care so that it complements the lower plane you can create beautiful buildings and achieve good results," said Roche, who is about to celebrate his 95th birthday. "The only way to do it is to find locations along the river where you can build high rise so that they wouldn't infringe on the city around it."

    The Dubliner recalled the difficulty he had when he wanted to build 12-storey buildings with housing in the Docklands (later built by another architect) and described how local authorities were cautious about the final result.

    "When I was building the Convention Centre there was a housing component to it.

    "I was trying to build 12 storeys high and I made a presentation in Dublin and at the time they were all yelling at me saying 'We're not going that high', 'we're not gonna let this fella build skyscrapers in Dublin'. As if a 12-storey building was a skyscraper.

    "So I said 'the hell with that!' and I worked on the Convention Centre which turned out great." The only major destination convention centre in the World that has no hotel attached. Because as you guessed, it was rejected. So now people attending the convention centre use Air BNB or push up other hotel prices by having to book rooms in smaller hotels spread around Dublin.


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  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Niallof9 wrote: »
    it is and isn't. Some of the constraints are the fact that the city is built on medieval and 18th century infrastructure. and any big picture thinking is refused outright. Look at the eastern bypass for example. If you don't want that then you have packed quays and a antiquated city road network. If you don't want highrise then you have to settle for blocky square apartment buildings and offices. IF you want to preserve every old thing because of posterity then be prepared to live with them when they are rack and ruin due to upkeep costs. Dublin infuriates me at times.

    For me some simple and not so simple ideas, and perhaps costly measures. A city market in the Iveagh or fruit markets. metro. Liffey cycle way even on the bloody side of it if possible. A liffey water taxi service. A bridge, tunnel over the tolka estuary. A remapping of the docks and how its organised, some of it such wasted space and potential. A complete break with the idea of North and South Dublin as two seprate identities. An Eastern bypass. High rise where appropriate. Eastpoint leveled and rebuilt. Some more reclamation of the sea like in the past. An honest appraisal of our city and civic spaces and what we want and need for them. An appreciation that Dublin is a city with sea and mountains and the benefits of that. An appreciation of our history but realising that no city can afford to become a museum. Better marketing and connection with under appreciated towns outside the city - Chapilizod, skerries, rush, lusk, malahide.

    the reality of Dublin is that it has improved beyond measure. Its glory years were the 18th century, we aren't going back to that. Its fallen years were possibly after the regeneration of the 60's. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0p8e1MUC0E

    Its got back to being a very liveable mid sized European capital city. Its no longer some sort of provincial hub.

    I mean here is an example from one of our most famous architects dealing with this sort of provincial ****e -

    Kevin Roche, a winner of the Pritzker Prize and the man behind Dublin's Convention Centre, said: "It is certainly possible to build taller buildings and still maintain the integrity of a city.

    "If it is built with care so that it complements the lower plane you can create beautiful buildings and achieve good results," said Roche, who is about to celebrate his 95th birthday. "The only way to do it is to find locations along the river where you can build high rise so that they wouldn't infringe on the city around it."

    The Dubliner recalled the difficulty he had when he wanted to build 12-storey buildings with housing in the Docklands (later built by another architect) and described how local authorities were cautious about the final result.

    "When I was building the Convention Centre there was a housing component to it.

    "I was trying to build 12 storeys high and I made a presentation in Dublin and at the time they were all yelling at me saying 'We're not going that high', 'we're not gonna let this fella build skyscrapers in Dublin'. As if a 12-storey building was a skyscraper.

    "So I said 'the hell with that!' and I worked on the Convention Centre which turned out great." The only major destination convention centre in the World that has no hotel attached. Because as you guessed, it was rejected. So now people attending the convention centre use Air BNB or push up other hotel prices by having to book rooms in smaller hotels spread around Dublin.

    Thats an excellent analysis. The convention centre is very impressive looking but I always think, it would look truly incredible if it was a bit bigger.

    Can you imagine the architect behind the Sydney Opera House being told his design is nice, but it has to be smaller than 10 storeys?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,342 ✭✭✭markpb


    Can you imagine the architect behind the Sydney Opera House being told his design is nice, but it has to be smaller than 10 storeys?

    Not the best example. The relationship between NSW government and the SOH's architect wasn't exactly pink and fluffy :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,688 ✭✭✭✭Muahahaha


    I thought there was (and maybe still is?) planning permission for a hotel behind the Convention Centre. Its a nice building but I wonder was that beige cladding always part of the final plan or did they cheap out on it. I think the glass structure looks great but the actual cladding wrapping the building isnt great.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    beauf wrote: »
    Not just Dublin. Ireland.

    I wonder is it because good design is expensive. Pretty much everything in Ireland is overpriced. So there isn't the budget for design.

    I think as a society we've driven out any appreciation of design except in niche areas. Maybe that's also happened in architecture schools.

    You can't buy taste. I think as a nation we just don't seem to be good at visual aesthetics. We are also the worst dressed European country despite our prosperity over the years. Our coastline has so much potential but seems to be blighted by grey concrete whenever we build anything.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Muahahaha wrote: »
    Looks gorgeous Cat. The southside does have some really nice apartment developments, I suppose because prices are a fair bit higher the developers have to put in more effort. But aside from that it sounds (and looks) like you've a good management company to keep the landscaping well. That isnt always the case in apartment developments, especially when a majority of apartments are owned by investors.

    Most apartments in my place are either owner occupied or owned by people who have actually lived on the estate. Several established medical consultants brought their first homes here as registrars or new consultants and then when they started having families moved out into a house but retained the original apartment as an investment. There are lots of landlords on the estate who might live in one apartment or house and let another.

    There's a couple of apartments in the newer phase let to social housing, but are very quiet and the only way you might perhaps identify them is the amount of children's stuff visible through the windows. The maintenance company do a very good job, and we get the flowerbeds replanted regularly all year around. The permanent caretaker knows most long term residents.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,310 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    KevRossi wrote: »
    The apartments here are dire, there isn't one built in the last 20 years that I'd keep.

    But when you have this model of drabness at the entrance to the port, it's obvious architecture has very little imagination here, or at least those with ideas are not allowed to express them. How much better would that look if they had a Hundertwasser building there.

    But then again the planners said this piece of insignificant nonsense was good in front of Dublin Castle on a street with the potential of Dame St.
    Christ, they're shíte. The thing in front of dublin castle is particularly bad. The stickers in the window are bad, but the glass front looks like scaffolding or something.
    Chinasea wrote: »
    Add to all this, no greenery and no both public and private tree planting. Filthy gray paths and public bins crying out for some regular power hosing.

    I'm fine with grey paths. Power hosing the ground is the biggest waste of money ever. Think people are finally realising cobble lock driveways weren't a great idea.


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  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    markpb wrote: »
    Not the best example. The relationship between NSW government and the SOH's architect wasn't exactly pink and fluffy :)

    You understand the comparison though.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,397 ✭✭✭CBear1993


    Never mind endless drab semi D suburbs with no proper communal hubs or villages. The whole place is a bit of a mess.

    This, the endless new developments popping up everywhere with the same 3/4 bed semis. Hundreds of them in a plot, just sprung up all over Dublin, Kildare, Meath, Wicklow. Every f*cking one looks the same!!

    White render, a tiny drive you can barely fit your car on, and a matchbox garden. It really is depressing looking.

    Took a drive up to the county Dublin seaside towns from the city at the weekend, these developments were on the edge of lusk/donabate/rush (can’t remember) but it was awful.

    Look at hollystown, not a shop or community to be seen around it. And don’t let them fool you that they will, it’s on the edge of damastown and the whole of Blanchardstown corporate/industrial parks. Why people pay €400K+ for a new house there is beyond me.

    Architects in the city have it handy. The real architects are building fantastic homes in rural Ireland in the countryside.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,310 ✭✭✭✭Cienciano


    CBear1993 wrote: »

    Architects in the city have it handy. The real architects are building fantastic homes in rural Ireland in the countryside.

    Hold on - One off housing in rural areas is poxy too.


    People are buying them because they need somewhere to live. I don't think the average person takes in the looks of the exterior of the house when buying. Functionality inside, size, location, price, garden size and orientation would be more important for me than what it looked liked from the outside.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,797 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    Niallof9 wrote: »
    people like yourself are the exact reason people like the OP can have these complaints. why would anybody build anything remarkable when there's people giving out about four storey buildings. People really need to actively walk the whole city and take it all in and then judge. I'm talking about seeing it from Swords to Sandyford, some of the worst stuff isn't modern. Most of the crappy architecture comes about because of nimbysim and the outrageous delays planning can have. Look up the history of the Ulster bank building in town. The Cosgraves had another beautiful 25 storey glass building refused, but they had old planning permission for the darker one that stands today much to DCC's dismay. Nimbys, an taisce, DCC, the Gerogian society, ABP, have this city ruined. Much of the Docklands will need to be rebuilt at some stage. and it wasn't FG who did this. the ringsend protests in 1999 against de high rise were facilitated by the same people of the ringsend protests last month. Your left leaning politicans and people scared of change. People complained about the reconstruction of 19th century Paris and the Dublin wide street comission. GO figure.

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/docklands-high-rise-schemes-threatened-by-ruling-1.207940?mode=sample&auth-failed=1&pw-origin=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.irishtimes.com%2Fnews%2Fdocklands-high-rise-schemes-threatened-by-ruling-1.207940

    https://www.thejournal.ie/dublin-ringsend-york-road-development-5167429-Aug2020/

    I don’t agree with NIMBYism, but AS per your reply the implication is that anybody who objects to planning applications is a NIMBY and was the catalyst in our case...

    Simply not the case and anybody can see through that deliberately disingenuous idea that you are playing with.

    If a build is not in keeping with other properties so the build overshadows a neighbour, causing loss of light it can be refused. Should be.

    In addition to the light issue the wall they built surrounding their front garden , a corner house was built to such a height that when you are driving out of the estate, traffic approaching the junction from the right is only visible at the last second. Too late, unsafe as you need to edge out to safely see.

    So either the planners fûcked up / couldn’t give two fûcks when approving or it was built outside of the specs submitted in the plans...

    Be good if that was the case the council would do a ‘post build’ inspection.. with the deterrent in place that IF something is built not to the plans, be it the wall or the main property they simply get instructions to tear it down or fix... that would focus the minds of these fûckwit builders.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,736 ✭✭✭lalababa


    Same s##t different day in Cork. If planning consists of putting 300 identical houses in a field just on the edge of the city , serviced by a country lane and feck all else, then things are tickety boo.
    Although they have put up some 8 story apts/office buildings recently around the train station.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 5,513 ✭✭✭bb1234567


    I live in an apartment in an award-winning mixed leafy estate of housing/apartment blocks, on a former religious order site. The architects office is on the estate so they have to look at their work every day, which helped with the design. Pet ownership is an accepted part of living in the apartments, with dog waste disposal unit in the parkland. The kitchen was open plan and useless before I got it walked off and fitted with useful shelving. Both bedrooms are ample and I have a decent sized living room where my large dining table fits in nicely. There is a small storage room within the apartment, but the underground car park was not well designed, and for family/active living storage units ought to have been provided at the outset for sports items, outdoorsy stuff etc. They are trying to figure out a way retrospectively provide locker units now. They did get a lot right in my estate and I'm very lucky to be living here, but way more such living spaces are needed in Dublin and with more forethought for all the practical needs of folk living in them. They need to be places you can call home, not just lodge in for a few years. Goodness knows these times we are getting to know our dwelling environment all too well.

    Mt St.Annes? What do I win


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,342 ✭✭✭markpb


    Strumms wrote: »
    If a build is not in keeping with other properties so the build overshadows a neighbour, causing loss of light it can be refused. Should be.

    If that was the case, which it’s not, the endless sea of low density, high-cost, single-family semi-Ds in Dublin would never change. Thankfully it’s slowly changing now with a greater mixture of styles and uses and a greater density being achieved. It’s a disconcerting change for people living in the semi-Ds who will continue to use the same reasons to object (not in keeping with the area, loss of sunlight, traffic, schools, etc) but it will continue happening.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 208 ✭✭Valresnick


    Apartments in Ireland are essentially rabbit hutches. You can hear everything above you in nearly all of them, even the high end one unless you buy a penthouse.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,287 ✭✭✭Niallof9


    Strumms wrote: »
    I don’t agree with NIMBYism, but AS per your reply the implication is that anybody who objects to planning applications is a NIMBY and was the catalyst in our case...

    Simply not the case and anybody can see through that deliberately disingenuous idea that you are playing with.

    If a build is not in keeping with other properties so the build overshadows a neighbour, causing loss of light it can be refused. Should be.

    In addition to the light issue the wall they built surrounding their front garden , a corner house was built to such a height that when you are driving out of the estate, traffic approaching the junction from the right is only visible at the last second. Too late, unsafe as you need to edge out to safely see.

    So either the planners fûcked up / couldn’t give two fûcks when approving or it was built outside of the specs submitted in the plans...

    Be good if that was the case the council would do a ‘post build’ inspection.. with the deterrent in place that IF something is built not to the plans, be it the wall or the main property they simply get instructions to tear it down or fix... that would focus the minds of these fûckwit builders.

    Yeah i'm not advocating every development. There has to be some planning, of course. and obviously without seeing it i can't really judge fairly so point accepted. I suppose i'm more referring to the high profile ones in key sites like in Marino, Glasnevin, the ones in Coolock etc. I mean loads of Dublin was new build. We have people on this thread objecting to semi d's, one off housing and apartments. like wut? people need to live somewhere and if you can't build in rural spaces, city centres, suburban areas where the hell can you? as another poster saids "not in keeping with the area" has its limits and thankfully so. I mean i'm sure the nice houses in MArino objected to the huge construction in the 1950s as not in keeping with the area. St Anne's Park was much larger yet we got it for housing, in fact the whole seafront area there was given over by Guinness. Things change, needs must. Yet if the same thing happened today people would be up in arms, against change.

    Its a living, breathing, ever changing city with diminishing space, and diminishing returns. we need to build up and we need to densify our city centres. instead we have semi d's in our main streets in the city and people objecting at every turn. and these costs and delay have knock on effects leading to shoddy cheaper design. The bridge fiasco being one latest example.

    i suppose the only fair thing is to see some context. i'd need to see the development you are talking about and know what region. if its anywhere in the urban region near a town centre like ranelagh or rathmines or Drumcondra then tough luck i say. if its out in stepaside or artane or somewhere completely suburban then yeah perhaps i'd have some sympathy, not much though unless it was truly blocking sunlight and hanging over the garden. and i'm sure its not because we have very stringent planning laws where any tom dick and harry can object to anything, anywhere in the country.


  • Posts: 11,614 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I did a driving tour of Scotland a couple of years ago. Loads of lovely small villages all in keeping with the area. Drive around Galway, where I'm from and its all McMansions everywhere.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,688 ✭✭✭✭Muahahaha


    We should also give credit where it is due. Here on Cuffe Street just off Harcourt Street this drab 1950s office building is getting replaced by something a lot easier on the eye

    This is it now

    cuffe1.jpg

    And how it will look in when finished in early 2022

    image.jpg

    A good effort on a small site so credit to developer David Kennon and architect Paschal Mahoney. Its going to be called the Greenside Building, more on it here https://www.irishtimes.com/business/commercial-property/greenside-building-promises-pandemic-proofed-office-solution-1.4378673


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,478 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    What really bugs me about Dublin is how we allow all of our streets to have cars parked on the footpaths. It's a total free for all outside my house, and it's just getting worse and worse as the years go on, I don't know if more people are buying cars or what. Last time I was visiting my parents in Spain, I didn't see one car on a footpath, not once. They have much higher kerbs and in town centres they have metal bollards on every street so this can't happen. They'll also ticket you if you have so much as a wheel on the footpath.
    There is literally no enforcement of this kind of illegal parking in Dublin and it makes the whole place a mess.
    If you don't have somewhere to park your car legally, a driveway or car park, you shouldn't be allowed to own one.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,478 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    CBear1993 wrote: »
    Architects in the city have it handy. The real architects are building fantastic homes in rural Ireland in the countryside.

    Is this a joke? Our countryside has been ruined by the ugliest houses imaginable peppered all over the land. Absolutely tasteless monstrosities. It has ruined the country for me.
    Here's a funny take on it -

    https://mcmansionhell.com/post/157457285986/mcmansion-hell-ireland-edition

    Or just look at the property section of thejournal.ie, the most hideous eyesore mansions thrown in the middle of beauty spots, and commenters on the articles going on about how amazing they are. We are just a tasteless crass nation if rural homes or many city buildings are anything to go on.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,513 ✭✭✭bb1234567


    Is this a joke? Our countryside has been ruined by the ugliest houses imaginable peppered all over the land. Absolutely tasteless monstrosities. It has ruined the country for me.
    Here's a funny take on it -

    https://mcmansionhell.com/post/157457285986/mcmansion-hell-ireland-edition

    Or just look at the property section of thejournal.ie, the most hideous eyesore mansions thrown in the middle of beauty spots, and commenters on the articles going on about how amazing they are. We are just a tasteless crass nation if rural homes or many city buildings are anything to go on.

    I hope it's a joke but unfortunately a lot of Irish people seem to be fond of the mcmansion aesthetic, otherwise why would so many keep getting built


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,478 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    bb1234567 wrote: »
    I hope it's a joke but unfortunately a lot of Irish people seem to be fond of the mcmansion aesthetic, otherwise why would so many keep getting built

    Yeah that's why I just don't hold any hope for design or planning in Ireland. Cities a mess, countryside a mess, and people carry on doing the same stuff over and over.


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