Approval given for second tallest building

Planning permission for Ireland's second tallest building - a 24-storey apartment tower about 1½ times the size of Liberty Hall…

Planning permission for Ireland's second tallest building - a 24-storey apartment tower about 1½ times the size of Liberty Hall - has been granted by Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council.

The apartment tower on the former M J Flood site in Sandyford Industrial Estate will be second in height only to the 32-storey residential tower approved by Bord Pleanála for a site opposite Heuston Station in Dublin.

It will be more than twice the height of the 10-storey tower proposed for the former baths site on Dún Laoghaire seafront, and about one-third higher than the 17-storey tower also approved by Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council for nearby Leopardstown at the edge of the Sandyford Industrial Estate.

The title of Ireland's second tallest building could be challenged very quickly, however, as a 32-storey building has also been proposed for the Jurys/Berkley Court site in Ballsbridge.

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Between them all the towers would have the potential to significantly change the profile of south Dublin, providing a series of what planners call "landmark buildings".

The site of the 24-storey tower approved by the council is opposite the Luas line at the Blackthorn Road/Blackthorn Avenue junction.

Included are a number of blocks in a courtyard style of up to nine storeys around the tower element. In all there are to be 259 apartments, with 15 live/work units with commercial use on the ground floor. There will be underground car parking, and approval for a gym, a creche and a cinema. All facades of the tower are to have balconies, with a "winter garden" on the top floor.

According to Independent Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown councillor Gearóid O'Keeffe, local opposition will definitely see the development referred to Bord Pleanála.

Almost 100 locals recently protested at the Leopardstown junction site of the proposed other 17-storey tower. Bord Pleanála is expected to rule on this at the end of the month.

However, according to senior Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council planner Declan McCullough the county development plan provides for such buildings. "A chapter in the development plan permits landmark buildings in certain locations and in certain conditions."

Tim O'Brien

Tim O'Brien

Tim O'Brien is an Irish Times journalist