Cork City Council buys Counting House complex for €35m to create new public library

New facility will include 300 study spaces; shop and café; lecture, performance, and exhibition spaces; an expanded Rory Gallagher music library; and Cork Local Studies section, while plaza will host concerts and public performances
Cork City Council buys Counting House complex for €35m to create new public library

The complex is more than three times the size of the current city library, and will be able to cater for an estimated 1m visitors a year expected to visit by 2050. Picture: Cork City Council

The former Counting House complex on South Main St in Cork city centre will be home to a new public library after being purchased by Cork City Council for €35m.

The news was announced at Monday night’s council meeting, where councillors welcomed the decision, though some expressed disappointment that a newbuild project would not be progressed.

The current library on Grand Parade was described by a council spokesperson as “undersized, inflexible, and in poor condition, with issues such as accessibility constraints, and poor energy performance”.

The new facility will include 300 study spaces; a new entrance and concourse; shop and café; lecture, performance, and exhibition spaces; an expanded Rory Gallagher music library; and Cork Local Studies section. The plaza will host concerts and public performances.

The complex is more than three times the size of the current city library, and will be able to cater for an estimated 1m visitors a year expected to visit by 2050.

The location was selected after a preliminary business case, undertaken by consultants EY, examined four potential options. This included refurbishing the existing premises, a newbuild on the Grand Parade site, and a newbuild on the riverfront carpark site next to the existing Grand Parade library, not in council ownership.

The Counting House complex, which includes the restored part of the former Beamish & Crawford brewery and a four-storey office complex, “emerged as the most affordable, lowest risk, and best performing option across all key criteria, including cost, value for money, deliverability, sustainability, and cultural impact”, the council spokesperson said.

The new library is expected to open to the public sooner than any of the other options considered, though a Part 8 planning process, involving public consultation, will still be required to adapt the complex.

The complex, bought from JPDC Ltd, was acquired for €35m plus Vat, with the support of Government funding.

'Meaningful future'

Lord Mayor Fergal Dennehy said: “Transforming such a landmark into a vibrant public library beautifully honours its past while giving it a meaningful future.” 

Council chief executive Valerie O’Sullivan said the plan “reflects international best practice, where cities such as Helsinki, Aarhus, London, and Montreal have transformed historic, industrial, or commercial buildings into vibrant, modern libraries that become major civic attractions.

She added that the decision “unlocks future redevelopment potential at the existing library site”.

Labour’s Ciara O’Connor said at the council meeting that she hoped the current library building would not be forgotten about, as “I would hate to see it go into further dereliction”.

Ms O’Sullivan assured her that the council had “no intention” of letting that happen.

Social Democrats councillor Niamh O’Connor told The Echo: “The Counting House is a beautiful building and I will be delighted to see it in public use.

“I have said now many times that I would love to see a new and purpose built public library that could be a jewel in the crown of our city, and that remains my view, but that is not the decision that had been made by the chief executive.” Now that the decision has been made, progressing the plans quickly is important, she said, welcoming the public consultation process.

Independent councillor Kieran McCarthy said that new plans were exciting: “It is the end of an era for the Grand Parade site, which first opened in 1930. The South Main St proposal will be the fourth public library site.

“As the Grand Parade site is left behind, it is also important that a plan is created for the wider dereliction on the Grand Parade adjacent the library.”

Cork GAA response

Cork GAA and the board of Páirc Uí Chaoimh told The Echo that they noted the refusal with disappointment.

Cork GAA CEO Kevin O’Donovan said: “We had consulted widely and considered multiple factors in making this application.

“The design was intended to greatly improve public safety by making it easier for buses attending the stadium to allow their passengers to disembark away from the public roadway on Monahan Road, and then to turn safely.

“This was not for commercial purposes, or to remove public access to Marina Park in any way. This was to help the flow of people on busy days at the county’s largest venue.

“We now need to consider the options open to the stadium, as the decision of a minority of councillors does not solve the problem that required the action to be taken in the first place.”

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