Skip to content
  • Catalogue
  • Dictionary of Irish Architects
  • Catalogue
  • Dictionary of Irish Architects
Menu

Menu

Perspective view of the main façade of the Aspro Factory, Naas Road, Dublin

Alan Hope (1909-65)

1947

Pencil on tracing paper

IAA Alan Hope Collection 86/127.111/245

Building for Work I: Factories

Perspective view of the main façade of the Aspro Factory, Naas Road, Dublin

Alan Hope (1909-65)

1947

Pencil on tracing paper

IAA Alan Hope Collection 86/127.111/245

Alan Hope was born in Liverpool in 1909 and attended Liverpool University School of Architecture for five years, graduating in 1932. In his President’s inaugural address to the Architectural Association of Ireland in 1952, he described the architecture course as he knew it: ‘I was trained in the rather rigidly classical school of architecture at Liverpool where we did the orders and the Renaissance and so had an answer to all design… I’ve no regret having the training I had, though perhaps with a different course I should not have been so long in freeing myself of the incubus of the Renaissance – then the acme of all great architecture’. After qualifying he came to Ireland where he worked in the office of Vincent Kelly and, from 1934, that of Frederick Hicks whose practice he continued after Hicks retired in 1945.

Hope certainly broke free from the rigid classicism of his training when he designed a new factory for Aspro (Ireland) Limited at the junction of the Naas and Kylemore Roads in Inchicore, Dublin. As presented in this perspective drawing, a fairly standard factory building (just visible on the right ), where aspirin would be manufactured, was to be fronted by a white-rendered, flat-roofed, administration block, its Modernist credentials visible in the bands of horizontal glazing, the curved double-height entrance, and the glazed tower bearing the factory name.

When completed in 1949, the Aspro Factory was very close to the design set out in this sketch. Only the glazed tower was omitted. The name was spelled out instead in letters perched on the parapet of the administration wing. The factory won Hope the RIAI Triennial Gold Medal for the period 1947-1949. This accolade was not enough to save the building however, and it was demolished in 1988.

A purifying architecture

Gary Boyd

Viewed from the south west, the Aspro (Ireland) Factory displays its svelte, modernist credentials in a raking perspective composition: the horizontality of its principal lines and strip windows; the singular white planarity of its walls; the sweeping curve of the oriel containing the celebrated staircase (21.1); the vertical interplay of the glass tower bearing its name; and the presence of a motorcar, since the 1920s the enduring modernist cypher of clean functionalist design invested with a dash of glamour and speed.

The urban inner-city landscape of the Inchicore of 1940s Dublin is elided, and little other context is given. A figure, drawn for scale, stands between the motorcar and the building. Behind the figure is a hedge. But then there is also a tree. A tree conspicuously in the middle of the drawing, leaning slightly rightwards but otherwise bifurcating the view of the building, its ethereal overstory companioning the transparency and verticality of the tower.

We can only assume that this tree is the salix genus, the willow tree, whose bark contains the compound salicin which, in its synthesized form, is realised as acetylsalicylic acid or aspirin, both the reason for the building and the productive process which it contains. The latter most likely takes place under the double saw-toothed roof – a more conventional factory form – that creeps into view on the righthand-side: a north-facing, light-filled clerestoried space where, under sanitary conditions workers press and pack tablets into tubes and boxes.

Black and white photograph of the ciruclar staircase in the Aspro Factory, Naas Road, Dublin, 1949.
21.1 Staircase, Aspro Factory, Naas Road, Dublin, 1949 (IAA Photo Collection 61/95 Y1)
Perspective drawing by Raymond McGrath of proposed Aspro Factory, Bath Road, Slough, England, 1938.
21.2 Raymond McGrath, perspective view of proposed Aspro Factory, Bath Road, Slough, England, 1938 (IAA Raymond McGrath Collection 78/30.243)

Within the modernity of the drawing there is then also an expression of a deeper history.  Druids, healers and apothecaries had known the pain-relieving properties of willow bark for centuries and longer, before it was ultimately realised in its modernised form as aspirin by Felix Hoffman in 1897. Bayer patented the medicine in 1899. Mass production followed. A global panacea for pain emerged. By 1948, the year Aspro came to Ireland, the company was selling six million tablets a day worldwide, its adverts stating its universal effectiveness, without ‘damage to stomach or heart’, on men, women and children, concerning everything from chills to fever, to period pains and sleepless nights. The Irish pharmaceutical industry was born.

Aspro arrived from Southbank (Melbourne) in Australia via Slough in England, its presence in Ireland in part because of continuing tariffs on certain items including medicines between the United Kingdom and its western neighbour (Pat McCarthy, A History of the Irish Pharmaceutical Industry (Dublin, 2021)). On its journey the company began to divest itself of the art-deco architecture of its Australian headquarters, firstly in the unrealised scheme for Slough by the Australian-born Raymond McGrath (21.2). The cancellation of this project on the outbreak of the Second Word War contributed directly to McGrath’s relocation to Dubin in 1940. Aspro found its modernist architectural apogee at Inchicore, courtesy of Alan Hodgson Hope, an English architect settled in Dublin. Hope had trained under the highly influential pedagogue Charles Herbert Reilly at Liverpool University, the first such establishment to gain Royal Institute of British Architects accreditation. Before graduating, he experienced practice as a student in Germany, possibly assisting in the design of Ford’s headquarters in Cologne (1931) and its development of the ideas of Albert Kahn first seen in Europe at Cork in 1917 – at the time a highly novel spatial manifestation, on this side of the Atlantic, of the scientific management practices developed by Henry Ford in his factories in Detroit. As a student, Hope had also won a competition for his proposal for the Liverpool Sanatorium Hall at Frodsham in Cheshire (1931) thus beginning an association between his practice and developing conventions for health, hygiene and medicine that would flow through the Aspro Factory (1948-50) and be further developed in his extensive and innovative designs for Cherry Orchard Fever Hospital, Dublin (1953); the Paediatric Unit at the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin (1953); and his unexecuted proposal for St Lawrence’s Hospital, Cabra, Dublin (1957), and so on.

Colour photograph taken by oyce Visser, Dudok Architectuur Centrum, of the Snelliusschool, Hilversum, Netherlands, 2025.
21.3 Snelliusschool, Hilversum, Netherlands, 2025 (photo: Joyce Visser, Dudok Architectuur Centrum)

An intimacy between building, design and health is within the DNA of modernist architecture. For architectural historian Beatriz Colomina, its emergence in the 1920s was to a large degree a response to the ever-present dangers of tuberculosis (Beatriz Colomina, X-Ray Architecture (Zürich, 2019)). She saw within its transparent walls – void where there used to be solid – a simile of the X-ray; in its whiteness, a hitherto impossible colour, the possibility for dirt to be exposed and dealt with; in its planarity and absence of ornament, unobstructed surfaces about which fresh air could flow, and soap, water and disinfectant applied, without hindrance. An architecture of purity, a purifying architecture.

Within this new language of space, material, organisation and functionality – whose most explicit examples include the sanatoria at Paimio in Finland by Alvar Aalto (1929-33), at Hilversum in the Netherlands by Johannes Duiker (1926-31) and, closer to Ireland, the Pioneer Health Centre (1935) designed by Owen Williams in Peckham, London – lay the promise that architecture could actively promote hygiene and health; effect change, induce well-being, fitness. While the D6 ‘Drys’ Boots Factory, Nottingham (1930-38), again by Williams, and which produced and packed powders and pills, is perhaps the closest functional modernist precedent to the Aspro Factory, there are perhaps other more obvious influences on its form and aesthetic. The De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill on Sea, East Sussex, for example, designed at the wholesome seaside in 1935 by the émigré architects Erich Mendelsohn and Serge Chermayeff – and itself reflecting the bulbous curvilinear forms and transparencies of the Paradise Restaurant for the Stockholm Exhibition of 1930 by Gunnar Asplund.

But there is also the presence of Willem Marinus Dudok. The interplay between horizontal and vertical forms, transparency and solidity, and between linearity and curving forms seen in the schools he designed for the municipality of Hilversum – and in particular, perhaps, the Snelliusschool (1930-32) – seem apposite as a source for the design of Aspro (21.3). Dudok’s reputation has somewhat faded in recent decades but between the wars he was highly influential internationally. He won the RIBA Gold Medal in 1935 (six years before Frank Lloyd Wright in 1941) and his often brick-based architecture – when viewed against the more abstract, placelessness of European functionalism and the International Style – assumed a more reassuring, less elite position: a more acceptable and accessible face of modernism. Accordingly, Dudokian forms and compositions were adopted and adapted for a range of uses across Europe and the United Kingdom, disseminating modernism to hitherto untouched populations.

Black and white photograph of the Aspro Factory, Naas Road, Dublin.
21.4 Aspro Factory, Naas Road, Dublin (IAA Photo Collection 61/95 X12)

The idea of a modernism of reassurance is present at Aspro. And is functionally apt. The Aspro factory was a public building designed to be seen from the street (21.4). Its form and public façade was part of a company identity – one ranging across scales from buildings to newspaper advertisements to the precise and uncluttered packaging of its products and their typefaces (never burdened by the presence of a serif), colour and design – that concerned the reassuring of a public that these products, ingested and used so intimately within the body itself, were both safe and effective. As seen from the drawing, at Aspro there is a modernism that is progressive but not avant-garde; up to date and dynamic but without risk nor obvious experiment; contemporary but with the presence of the salix genus connected with time-served traditions; civic, solid and yes, conservative, but also transparent, bright, clean and illuminated: a public front to evoke and express the professional application of scientific and hygienic methods taking place to the rear of the site where (21.5), unseen to the public eye, white pills were being hygienically made and packaged to assume the form of Aspro products and be released to the population.

There was, however, one final group for whom the architecture of the Aspro factory also evoked reassurance within a spirit of modernity – the factory workers themselves, whose conditions of employment included the use of a canteen; a stage, performance space and dancefloor; a lounge; the presence of nurses and the provision of healthcare which included periodic radiographic screening (Ellen Rowley, Housing, Architecture and the Edge Condition (Abingdon, 2018), 28): a mid-century landscape of care and welfare within the workplace that can be described as paternalistic but remains, perhaps, in times of employment precarities a highly relevant paradigm for the social valuing of labour and the cohesion that this can bring. All the more lamentable then that this building, through which so many strands of international modernity and modernist social, technological and aesthetic aspirations, concerns and thinking flowed, that this Royal Institute of Architects in Ireland Triennial Gold Medal winner of 1950, that this significant piece of local, national and international heritage, should have been lost through careless destruction in 1988.

 

 

Gary A. Boyd is Full Professor of Architecture at University College Dublin and leads the Architectures of Coal in Modern Europe (ACME) project, a European Research Council Advanced Grant (2025-30).

 

Plan of the Aspro Factory, Dublin, by Alan Hope,1947.
21.5 Alan Hope, Aspro Factory Plan, 1947 (IAA Alan Hop Collection 86/127.111 Plan)

Back to main Pivot Points page.

Donate

Large or small, every donation helps secure the future of the collection. We are truly grateful for your support.

Donate now

Donate

Large or small, every donation helps secure the future of the collection. We are truly grateful for your support.

Donate now

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin

Address

45 Merrion Sq.
Dublin 2
D02 VY60

Contact

01 663 3040
info@irisharchitecturalarchive.ie

English | As Gaeilge

  • English

Opening Hours

Reading Room

10am-5pm, Tuesdays to Fridays; Mondays by appointment

Exhibitions

10am-5pm, Mondays to Fridays

Newsletter

Stay in touch, receive updates about exhibitions and events

Subscribe

English | As Gaeilge

Menu
  • Catalogue
  • Dictionary of Irish Architects
  • About Us
    • About
    • Board
    • Members
    • Staff
    • Annual Reports
    • Contact
  • Our Collections
    • Collections
    • Online Catalogue
  • Our Exhibitions
    • Current Exhibitions
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Our Building
    • No. 45 Merrion Square
    • Venue Hire
  • Access
    • Visit
    • Reading Room
  • Support us
    • Donate
    • Major Sponsors
Search this site

Subscribe

* indicates required

The Irish Architectural Archive will use the information you provide on this form to send you its regular Newsletter. Please confirm that you would like to hear from us:

You can change your mind at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link in the footer of any email you receive from us, or by contacting us at info@iarc.ie. We will treat your information with respect. By clicking below, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with these terms.

We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp's privacy practices.

  • English