Newcastle firm opens first office in EU

Faulkner Browns Architects has opened a studio in Dublin around a mile and a half away from the city’s Guinness Brewery, which the practice was last year appointed to masterplan the redevelopment of.

Its new Leeson Street office in the Irish capital is the Newcastle-based practice’s second international office – and first in the EU – following the opening of an outpost in Vancouver in 2019.

Dubliner Niall Durney, who joined Faulkner Browns in 2018, will lead the new office aided by new local recruits and staff transferring from Tyneside.

Guinness Brewery, by Rachel Ferriman

The Guinness Brewery where Faulkner Brown is designing Dublin’s ‘first’ zero carbon district

The practice said that in addition to supporting its role on the 500-home, 4.8ha Guinness Quarter, for developer Ballymore, the new studio will also be a base for its work on masterplanning and designing new facilities for the Sport Ireland Campus in western Dublin and help drive new commissions.

Durney said the new studio would allow Faulkner Browns to offer a “unique proposition” to Dublin and Ireland, by “combining the experience of a larger practice with a quality and design-led approach to architecture”.

“This new studio will allow us to better collaborate with the local community as we craft a major new piece of Dublin city centre at the Guinness Quarter,” he said.

Last month, Faulkner Brown’s £22m refurbishment of George Kenyon’s grade II* Newcastle Civic Centre was one of five projects shortlisted for a RIBA North East Award 2022.