Storm Éowyn
Due to Storm Éowyn, the Irish Architectural Archive reading room and Architecture Gallery will be closed on Friday 24 January 2025. The Archive will reopen at 10am on Monday 27 January 2025.
Due to Storm Éowyn, the Irish Architectural Archive reading room and Architecture Gallery will be closed on Friday 24 January 2025. The Archive will reopen at 10am on Monday 27 January 2025.
In 1780, John Dawson, Viscount Carlow and 1st Earl of Portarlington commissioned James Gandon to design a new mansion on his Co. Laois estate. Work progressed on the house from 1790, and the landscape was re-designed, but by the time of Dawson’s death in 1798, only the shell of the house was completed. Dawson’s son, the 2nd Earl of Portarlington, employed several architects to complete the work. From 1822 to 1831 Arthur and John Williamson produced designs for a kitchen wing and the north front portico which were unrealized. However, their scheme for the entrance portico was implemented. Lewis Vulliamy took over in the early 1830s. Vulliamy exhibited his designs for Emo at the Royal Academy in 1834 and produced working drawings for the north portico, as well as unexecuted designs kitchen wing. The 3rd Earl, who succeeded in 1845, employed William Caldbeck to decorate the rotunda, drawing room and library, build a bachelor’s wing above a new kitchen block and erect gate lodges. This work was completed in 1861.
The complex architectural evolution of the house is reflected in the drawings in Emo Court Collection. These have now been digitised as are available via the IAA’s online catalogue.
McLaughlin & Harvey’s ‘concrete squad’ tamping a section of freshly poured concrete on the roof of the Gresham Hotel, 1927.
The Irish Architectural Archive is holding a sale of duplicate books and books that fall outside its collecting remit. 10am to 5pm, Friday 8 November 2024.
The IAA is delighted to be participating once again in Open House Dublin. Visit 45 Merrion Square between 10am and 4pm on Saturday 19 October 2024.
Built to Brew: the Architecture and Urban History of the Dublin Brewery, by Dr Livia Hurley.
Collection highlight. Architectural drawing by Michael Wills from 1728 for a schoolmaster’s house in Drogheda, Co. Louth.
Join us in the IAA for Culture Night, Friday 20 September 2024, from 5pm to 9pm.
The Irish Architectural Archive is seeking to recruit a qualified archivist on a full-time, fixed-term basis to acquire, catalogue and provide access to records of Arts Council architecture funding awards.