List of tallest buildings in Ireland

This is a list of the tallest habitable buildings on the island of Ireland (used for living and working in, as opposed to masts and churches). The island of Ireland has relatively few tall buildings. As of 2017, there were several proposals to change this,[1][2][3] with developments proposed for Cork,[4] Galway,[5] and Dublin.[6] The island's first tall building was Liberty Hall, built in 1965, which stands at 59.4 metres (195 ft). The current tallest habitable building on the island of Ireland is the Obel Tower in Belfast, Northern Ireland at 88.31 metres (289.7 ft).[7][8] .The tallest storied building in the Republic of Ireland is Capital Dock in Dublin, at about 79 metres (259 ft).[9][10]

Tallest habitable buildings

Northern Ireland

Rank Name Location Type Year
completed
Floors
(above ground)
Height Picture
1Obel TowerBelfastResidential20102888.31 m (289.7 ft)
2Grand Central HotelBelfastHotel19752380 m (260 ft)
3Belfast City HospitalBelfastHospital19861576 m (249 ft)
4Belfast Hilton HotelBelfastHotel19981663 m (207 ft)
5Royal Victoria HospitalBelfastHospital20121263 m (207 ft)
6The BoatBelfastResidential, Office20101562 m (203 ft)
7BT Riverside TowerBelfast*Office19981461 m (200 ft)
8Divis TowerBelfastResidential19662061 m (200 ft)
9=Linium SquareBelfastOffice20051355 m (180 ft)
9=Causeway TowerBelfastOffice20041355 m (180 ft)
9=Great Northern TowerBelfastOffice19921355 m (180 ft)
12Belfast City HallBelfastGovernment building1906N/A53 m (174 ft)
13Grainne HouseBelfastResidential19681752 m (171 ft)
14Europa HotelBelfastHotel19711351 m (167 ft)
15Lanyon PlaceBelfastOffice20141250 m (160 ft)

Republic of Ireland

Rank Name Location Type Year
completed
Floors
(above ground)
Height Picture
1Capital DockDublinMixed-use201822[10]79 m (259 ft)[11]
2The ElysianCorkMixed-use200817[12]71 m (233 ft)[12][13]
3=Google DocksDublinOffice201015[14]67 m (220 ft)
3=Cork County HallCorkOffice19681767 m (220 ft)[15]
5Millennium TowerDublinResidential19981663 m (207 ft)
6Liberty HallDublinOffice19651759.4 m (195 ft)
7One George's Quay PlazaDublinOffice20021359 m (194 ft)
8RiverpointLimerickMixed use20081558.5 m (192 ft)
9Crowne PlazaDundalkHotel200714[16]58 m (190 ft)
10Clayton HotelLimerickHotel20021757 m (187 ft)
11Metro Hotel, BallymunDublinHotel200515[17]52.1 m (171 ft)[18]
12Alto VetroDublinResidential20081651 m (167 ft)

Tallest buildings by city

  • Only includes cities with buildings taller than 50m
  • Cities in light blue are in Northern Ireland
City Building Height Floor count Completed
BelfastObel Tower88 m (289 ft)282010
DublinCapital Dock79 m (259 ft)22[10]2018
CorkThe Elysian71 m (233 ft)172008
LimerickRiverpoint58.5 m (192 ft)152008

Under construction

Name Location Type Floors
(above ground)
Height Notes
City Quays 3 Belfast Office 16[19] 73 m Construction commenced in June 2019[20]
Exo TowerDublinOffice17[21]73 mAs of January 2018 work started with completion due "March 2020"[22]
Bedford SquareBelfastMixed use17[23]72.7 m"The £85m Bedford Square project started late [2018] and [is to be] completed in 2021"[24]
The PrismCorkOffice1570 mConstruction started in February 2020 with an aim for completion in late 2021[25]
Ulster University CampusBelfastUniversity1255.6 mConstruction halted briefly from March to June 2018[26][27]
Boland's QuayDublinMixed Use12 & 1354 mTo be occupied by Google on completion

See also

References

  1. "High rise building needed in Dublin to prevent city sprawling 'to Athlone'". Independent.ie. 2017-04-14. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
  2. "Simon Coveney thinks Ireland should go high-rise 'in the right places'". Thejournal.ie. 2017-04-28. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
  3. Ireland, Hospitality. "Knight Frank Says 'Urgent Need' For Johnny Ronan's Dublin Skyscraper - Hospitality Ireland".
  4. "Sky's no limit for New Cork as 40-storey tower proposed for Port site". Irish Examiner. 2017-04-20. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
  5. Enda Cunningham (2017-06-02). "'Skyscraper' proposal to tower over new Eyre Square East Quarter - Connacht Tribune". Connachttribune.ie. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
  6. Frank McDonald (2017-05-03). "Dublin's tallest building planned by Johnny Ronan". Irishtimes.com. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
  7. "Obel tower". emporis.com.
  8. "Obel Tower, Belfast". Glenform Construction. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  9. Ciarán Hancock (22 July 2016). "John Sisk to build major development at Capital Dock". Irishtimes.com. Irish Times. Retrieved 10 June 2017.
  10. "Capital Dock to set new benchmark with two-bed units renting at €3,300 a month". irishtimes.com. Irish Times. 20 November 2018. Capital Dock is Ireland’s tallest residential building at 22 storeys
  11. "Huge new office development set for Dublin's Docklands". thejournal.ie. The Journal. 20 October 2015.
  12. "Cork anchor unit for over €13m". Irish Times. 9 April 2008.
  13. "2008 – The Elysian, Eglinton St., Cork". Archiseek. 2010.
  14. "Google snaps up Dublin's landmark Montevetro development". Independent News & Media. 17 February 2011.
  15. "County Hall, County Cork". National Inventory of Architectural Heritage. Retrieved 19 October 2018. Detached rectangular-plan seventeen-storey county hall, built 1968, [..] For many years it stood as the tallest building in Ireland at 67m
  16. "Crowne Plaza Dundalk Could Be Set To Change Hands". Talkofthetown.ie. 12 March 2018. Retrieved 19 October 2018. The 14 storey, 129 bed Crowne Plaza Dundalk opened in September 2007
  17. "€5.5m for hotel and apartments". irishtimes.com. Irish Times. 2 April 2014. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  18. "Planning application: Metro Hotel, Dublin Airport, Santry Cross, Ballymun Road, Dublin 9". Dublin City Council. 16 November 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  19. "Planning approval for £46m Belfast office block".
  20. BelfastHarbour (2019-06-19). "Progress is in full throttle at the City Quays 3 site with the first piling rig arriving earlier this week. The scheme will accommodate 1,800 people once complete and represents Belfast Harbour's largest development project to date.pic.twitter.com/Wfz29HuPtg". @BelfastHarbour. Retrieved 2019-06-20.
  21. Olivia Kelly (2016-03-31). "Green light for plan to build Dublin's tallest office block". Irishtimes.com. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
  22. "A European investment fund has bought the site of Dublin's future tallest office block". The Journal. January 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  23. "Bedford Square Phase 2". Future Belfast. Retrieved 2018-04-16.
  24. "Student digs and office builds to dominate Belfast's skyline". Belfast Telegraph. 5 February 2019.
  25. "Preparatory work commences on the 15-storey Prism office building in Cork". Irish Examiner. 24 February 2020. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
  26. "Ulster University cannot say when halted Belfast campus build will re-start". Irishnews.com. 28 March 2018. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  27. "Work under way again at Ulster University's Belfast campus after delays". 28 June 2018. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.