Hawkins House | |
---|---|
Etymology | Named after Hawkins Street |
General information | |
Town or city | Dublin |
Country | Ireland |
Coordinates | 53°20′48″N6°15′30″W / 53.3466009°N 6.2582051°W |
Completed | 1964 |
Demolished | 2020–21 |
Height | 41.45m [1] |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 12 |
Floor area | 122,000 sq ft (11,300 m2) |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Sir Thomas Bennett |
Hawkins House was a 12-storey office block in Dublin, Ireland. It was demolished in 2021.
Hawkins House, with the Screen Cinema, was built on the site of the Theatre Royal which sat on the corner of Hawkins Street and Townsend Street. Hawkins House is on the corner of Poolbeg Street and Hawkins Street and was built between 1962 and 1964. It was the first of a set of buildings erected on this block, including Apollo House in 1969, the Screen Cinema in 1972 and College House in 1974. The building was the former Department of Health headquarters. [2]
Along with College House, Hawkins House was sold for £12 million in 1984. [3]
The building was designed by English architect, Sir Thomas Bennett, and developed by the Rank Organisation. The 12-storey block had two curtain walls with two concrete slab facades. With O'Connell Bridge House, the impact of the height and bulk of Hawkins House led to the Dublin Corporation re-evaluating the guidelines around building height in the city. [3]
The building was considered to be one of the ugliest in Dublin, [4] [5] being voted the worst building in Dublin in 1998. [6] Permission was granted to demolish the block in 2017, [7] with the demolition planned to take a year from 2020. It was the last of the modern structures on the block to be razed. [2]
O'Connell Street is a street in the centre of Dublin, Ireland, running north from the River Liffey. It connects the O'Connell Bridge to the south with Parnell Street to the north and is roughly split into two sections bisected by Henry Street. The Luas tram system runs along the street.
Ballymun is an outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland, at the northern edge of the Northside, the green-field development of which began in the 1960s to accommodate a housing crisis in inner city areas of Dublin. While the newly built housing was state-of-the-art at the time, comprising high-rise tower blocks and flat complexes, residents were moved in years before shops, schools and other infrastructure were fully ready, and the area became well known for both a strong community spirit and considerable social challenges. Ballymun has several sub-districts such as Sillogue, Coultry, Shangan and Poppintree, and is close to both the Republic of Ireland's only IKEA store and to Dublin Airport. The area is the source of one Dublin river, and parts lie in the floodplain of another, and there are a number of parks.
Over the centuries, there have been five theatres in Dublin called the Theatre Royal.
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The Screen Cinema was a three-screen cinema in Hawkins Street, Dublin, Ireland.
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The Regal Cinema was a film theatre that operated for almost a quarter of a century in Dublin, Ireland, until its closure in 1962.
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Hawkins Street is a street in central Dublin, Ireland. It runs south from Rosie Hackett Bridge, at its junction with Burgh Quay, for 160 metres (170 yd) to a crossroads with Townsend Street, where it continues as College Street.
Apollo House was a 9-storey office block in Tara Street, Dublin, Republic of Ireland.
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College Square is a mixed-use building development, under construction as of April 2024, in Dublin, Ireland. The building is located between Townsend Street, Hawkins Street, Poolbeg Street and Tara Street in the Dublin 2 postal district. Once finished, it is due to become the tallest habitable building in the Republic of Ireland, with a height of 82 metres, surpassing the current tallest building, Capital Dock.
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