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'If you must build something there, it has to be world class' - the saga of the €250 million Cork city skyscraper

Should the mooted 40-storey building be constructed on Cork’s docklands it would become Ireland’s tallest structure.

port Port of Cork Port of Cork

LOCAL OPPOSITION TO a proposed 40-storey skyscraper at Cork Port has gathered momentum in recent weeks.

The development, the brainchild of US-based, Kerry-born developers Kevin and Donal O’Sullivan, has been on the cards since April 2017, when the Port of Cork sold them a site at the double estuary of the River Lee for in the region of €5 million (the original guide price for the land when it came to market in 2016 was €7 million).

Assuming the projected construction (by the brothers’ Irish company, Tower Development Properties) actually takes place, it would stand as Ireland’s tallest building. The proposed development is expected to cost something approaching €250 million, and is thought to comprise both office and apartment space, and a hotel.

However, in recent days a petition by artist John Adams calling for the scrapping of the development has garnered media attention (and about 1,400 online signatures).

Adams says that the proposed skyscraper will ‘cover up and destroy’ the listed buildings on site at the Port of Cork.

The Green Party’s Oliver Moran meanwhile says that if a building does end up being constructed, the design of it should be tendered out to international competition in order to ensure the finished product is ‘world class’.

tower Artist's rendition of the proposed tower Tower Development Properties Tower Development Properties

‘World class’

“We have to give the developers the benefit of the doubt,” he told TheJournal.ie. “We have to assume they want what’s best for Cork. I’d still be of the opinion that location is not suitable for a skyscraper.”

Cork does need to look at going high, but not there.
If it does happen, the building has to be iconic, not the generic construction they’ve hinted at in the artist’s drawings. You could import a building like that from anywhere. We would challenge them to hold an international design competition.

Kevin O’Sullivan, whose previous construction output includes parts of New York’s Ground Zero towers and 9/11 memorial, is continuing to wax lyrical about the project despite the opposition coming from the locality.

“It was the presence of the historic Custom House and the wonderful bonded warehouses that attracted me to the site in the first place,” he said.

We are putting in a lot of time and painstaking work on planning the conservation programme (of the area).
The proper restoration of these buildings will cost tens of millions of euro. It’s easier to construct new buildings. The hard work here will be in preserving what is already there.

“We will fully embrace the maritime and commercial history of the site and restore the existing buildings to their former glory, making it a worthy visitor attraction in the heart of Cork City,” he added.

All that aside, Moran hasn’t given up entirely on planning for the development being refused by Cork City Council.

aerial The proposed construction site Cushman and Wakefield Cushman and Wakefield

’50-50′

“I think it’s kind of 50-50,” he said. “The reason I say this is because I think it would be better not to go ahead.”

Once a skyscraper goes up it doesn’t come down again. I’m worried about the permanency of this.

Cork City Council is, naturally, under no obligation to grant any planning application. “It would be very easy to zone the land as open space amenity, and keep it for the public,” says Moran.

But I would imagine no planning application will be lodged until there’s some clarity on the city’s own redevelopment plans for the Docklands, so the new project can be incorporated into those ideas.
But that dock… it’s the first thing that a visitor to the city sees. Whatever goes there has to be iconic.

O’Sullivan meanwhile is firm that the new structure will be a benefit to the Leeside community.

“It is our aim to develop a genuine community and civic amenity. It goes without saying that we will work closely with the city council on all aspects of the development,” he said.

“I would ask people not to pre-judge the issues but wait to see the comprehensive planning and conservation proposal we will lodge with Cork City Council later this year.”

It will be worth waiting for.

Read: Irish people stopped paying mortgages in their droves after a ruling blocked the banks from evicting

Read: ‘We are trying to sound the alarm’ – committee hears Public Services Card is a legal ticking time bomb

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    Mute Neal, not Neil.
    Favourite Neal, not Neil.
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    Feb 19th 2017, 8:41 AM

    Somebody being murdered is not “antics”.

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    Mute 3monkey
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    Feb 19th 2017, 12:46 PM

    I saw Coveney & Vradkar in Boots yesterday

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    Mute saoirse janneau
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    Feb 19th 2017, 2:16 PM

    @3monkey: lol old arsenic and lace..

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    Mute Paul Culligan
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    Feb 19th 2017, 8:58 AM

    I get some of those symptoms when I eat the wife’s dinners. She’s either a bad cook, or genuinely tryin’ to get rid of me.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Feb 19th 2017, 10:22 AM

    @Paul Culligan: So you didn’t read the instructions when you purchased the goods…..

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    Mute Paul Culligan
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    Feb 19th 2017, 12:34 PM

    She does the shopping as well Chris, so I’m caught either way.

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    Mute Tony Stanley
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    Feb 19th 2017, 9:13 AM

    Joffreys death on Game of Thrones made it cool again!

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    Mute Liz Finn
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    Feb 19th 2017, 10:47 AM

    Wait! Joffrey dies…., ah here… spoiler alert! Although it’s game of thrones so it’s probably more shocking if a character actually doesn’t get killed….

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    Mute Patrick Gough
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    Feb 19th 2017, 11:01 AM

    The borgias used to take small quantities of poison over time till the built up resistance to it. Then when they invited victims to a meal they could all eat the same food and only the guests would die

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    Mute John O'Driscoll
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    Feb 19th 2017, 12:46 PM

    Second most deadly poison in the world is platytoxin from zoanthids, a species related to coral and anemones and which is an hazard to marine aquarium keepers, coming in on coral frags. A single gram is enough to to kill 300,000 mice, or 80 people.
    Or even pure nicotine, a favourite of the assassins of the Court of Louis Roi du Soleil, who would coat their dagger blades with it, knowing that their victim need only sustain a slight nick to be killed. The deadly poison, there’s enough in a single cigarette to kill several, if it be extracted and administered direct to the blood, suppresses the respiratory system and kills within minutes.
    End of the day it could have been a lot of things. “Tout est poison, rien n’est pas poison. La poison c’est la dose.” Paracelsus.

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    Mute John O'Driscoll
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    Feb 19th 2017, 1:28 PM

    Btw smoking a cigarette doesn’t kill one (short-term) because the absorption of nicotine through the cheek cells allows the body to metabolise the tiny amounts before it kills. Not so with direct injection or administration via an open wound.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 19th 2017, 2:07 PM

    By bottle or by tongue, a joke about malicious gossip lol. But the Romans use to carry arsenic into battle incase they lost the battle as they could retreat and dump the arsenic into the wells they came across and that is where poisoning the well expression came from.
    http://www.rferl.org/a/wikileaks_cables_add_to_speculation_over_litvinenko/2254821.html

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    Mute John O'Driscoll
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    Feb 19th 2017, 1:26 PM

    The juice of gone-off prawns has been used to get rid of the occasional inconvenient husband in Asia too. Mixed in with a curry.

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