Based in Dublin, Cork and London, O'Donnell + Tuomey Architects are
revered for their work with urban design, public and private housing,
and key educational and cultural buildings in Ireland, the Netherlands
and the UK. In London they are best known for two major projects: the
Photographers' Gallery and the London School of Economics Saw Swee Hock
Student Centre. Sheila O'Donnell and John Tuomey, who both taught at
University College Dublin and lecture internationally, constantly look
at the way in which different geographical, social and political
influences have shaped their iconic works and approach to architecture
generally. This book, which is a second edition following the success of
the first edition published in 2014, is divided into eight sections,
each dealing with a different aspect of the practice's concerns: Studio,
Courtyards, The World Outside, London Times, Subtraction and Addition,
Venice Excursions, Building Ground and Cat's Cradles. Somewhere between
a monograph and a memoir, a studio portfolio and a personal scrapbook,
this book describes some of the motivating ideas behind the architects'
iconic designs. Nine short essays, alternately written by Sheila
O'Donnell and John Tuomey, set the theoretical background for thirteen
projects carried out between 1999-2014. Illustrations range from early
stage concept sketches to specific photography that has been especially
commissioned for the book, to evocatively capture the essence of
O'Donnell and Tuomey's buildings.