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The Exo Building

Buildings and structures in Dublin (city)Buildings and structures under constructionDublin DocklandsOffice buildings in the Republic of IrelandSkyscraper office buildings in the Republic of Ireland
Skyscrapers in the Republic of Ireland
THE EXO BUILDING (AT THE POINT SQUARE)
THE EXO BUILDING (AT THE POINT SQUARE)

The Exo Building is a 17-storey office building located at the corner of North Wall Quay and East Wall Road in Dublin 1, Ireland. The building is adjacent to the Point Depot (now the 3Arena) fronting on to the river Liffey and Dublin port. As of 2021, it is the tallest office building in the Republic of Ireland at 73 metres tall. The name Exo is in reference to its exoskeleton which reflects the traditional industrial crane and gantry landscape of the port area. State owned postal services and delivery company An Post have signed a lease to become the anchor tenant of the building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Exo Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Exo Building
East Wall Road, Dublin North Wall (North Dock B ED)

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.34755 ° E -6.22755 °
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Address

Exo Building

East Wall Road
D01 X2P2 Dublin, North Wall (North Dock B ED)
Ireland
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THE EXO BUILDING (AT THE POINT SQUARE)
THE EXO BUILDING (AT THE POINT SQUARE)
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Britain Quay
Britain Quay

Britain Quay (Irish: Cé na Breataine) is a street and quay in Dublin on the south bank of the River Liffey between Sir John Rogerson's Quay and the confluence of the River Liffey, River Dodder and Grand Canal. Originally known as Great Britain Quay, the quay was built in the 1790s as part of the opening of Grand Canal Dock. The quay was widened in the mid-19th century, with works undertaken to dredge and deepen the riverbed alongside the quay wall in the 1870s. In 1873, Great Britain Quay was recorded as being 250 feet (76 m) in length.Part of the working Dublin Port facilities for several hundred years, the quay was a docking point for coal carrying cargo vessels, and the site of a number of industrial buildings – including a chemical works which was destroyed by fire in the early 20th century. By this time the quay's structures also included a navigation "hailing station" at the junction with Sir John Rogerson's Quay. A time ball sat on top of this station which, when operated remotely from Dunsink Observatory, signaled that it was 1pm. In the early 21st century this station, by then a protected structure, was demolished by the Dublin Docklands Development Authority. This demolition occurred as part of development works at the corner between Sir John Rogerson's Quay and Britain Quay in preparation for the construction of the U2 Tower, which would have been Ireland's tallest building. That project was later scrapped in the economic downturn, and ultimately Capital Dock was erected on the site (Ireland's tallest building on its completion in 2018).Remaining buildings on the Record of Protected Structures on Britain Quay include a former lock keeper's cottage and the three nearby canal locks which separate Grand Canal Dock from the River Liffey. These three locks, named Westmoreland Lock, Buckingham Lock, and Camden Lock, were built in 1796.A public transport bridge (carrying pedestrians, cyclists, and public transport only) had been proposed to connect Britain Quay to York Quay across the River Dodder. As of early 2018, the proposed bridge (described in planning documents under the interim project name of the "Dodder Public Transportation Opening Bridge") was in an initial public consultation phase.