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Blackpitts Student Accommodation / The Tannery by Shay Cleary Architects

Project name:
Blackpitts Student Accommodation/ The Tannery
Architecture firm:
Shay Cleary Architects
Location:
Newmarket Dublin 8, Ireland
Photography:
Marie Louise Halpenny
Principal architect:
Shay Cleary Mark Halpin
Design team:
Built area:
9,600 m²
Site area:
3,352 m²
Design year:
2017
Completion year:
2020
Interior design:
Collaborators:
Civil engineer:
Donnachadh O'Brien & Associates Consulting Engineers
Structural engineer:
Donnachadh O'Brien & Associates Consulting Engineers
Environmental & MEP:
Ethos Engineering
Landscape:
Dermot Foley Landscape Architects
Lighting:
Kavanagh
Construction:
Concrete Frame and Blockwork Infill
Supervision:
BAM Building Ltd
Visualization:
Brady Shipman Martin
Tools used:
Concrete
Material:
Jura Beige Limestone
Budget:
€25.5M
Client:
GSA/ Uninest Student Residences
Status:
Completed
Typology:
Hospitality › Student Housing

Designed by Shay Cleary Architects, Blackpitts Student Accommodation/ The Tannery is a complex urban student housing scheme, located in the Liberties area of Dublin 8 which is currently undergoing extensive urban regeneration. The site is bounded to the east by Blackpitts, to the north by a new pedestrian street which it shares with a new hotel and to the west by the boundary wall to the adjoining Warrenmount Convent. The scheme provides 296 student rooms and associated communal facilities in a U-shaped perimeter arrangement enclosing a west facing quadrangle courtyard.

The building ranges in scale from seven to four floors with six lift & stair cores serving forty-eight apartments each with communal living/dining spaces. The cluster apartments range in size from three to eight bedrooms, with each bedroom provided with a study desk, ensuite toilet and shower pod. A two-storey gymnasium building adjacent to the boundary wall forms the western enclosure to the courtyard.

Through high quality architectural design, the building is visually and materially anchored in its context in this particular part of Dublin. One of the primary design features of the student housing is the incorporation of the generous communal courtyard which includes a specialist landscape design with trees, furniture and high-quality materials. The building is clad in Jura Beige limestone which provides an attractive and durable finish and helps to reflects light into the courtyard. Careful consideration is given to the durability and life spans of all specified products and materials.

The project is a BIM Level 2 project using Autodesk BIM 360 and Field tools to streamline communication of data and drawings and has been recognised as an Innovation in Construction Award Winner in 2018. The project transformed a brown field site to a green field footprint by creating large expanses of green using all sedum roofs, 85% green area ground landscaping, as well as ground water and rainwater harvesting tanks that can be used for maintenance of the green areas.

The overall design for the building placed great emphasis on the creation of good public spaces and orientation for natural light throughout the day - with effective design and construction, the building’s outcome went beyond the client’s brief.

The project was the recipient of the Student Accommodation Project of the Year Award at the 2019 Irish Building and Design Awards. Following this recent success, the project is shortlisted for an award at the upcoming 2020 Irish Construction Excellence (ICE) Awards. Nominated in the category “Commercial Over €10m” in competition with 3 other major projects across the country, the shortlisting is a recognition of the architectural design quality of the scheme, the high standard of construction execution by BAM Ireland and the innovative nature of the BIM-enabled design and construction management which was employed across the project.


By Liliana Alvarez

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