Criminal Courts of Justice, Dublin explained

Criminal Courts of Justice
Native Name:Na Cúirteanna Breithiúnais Coiriúla
Native Name Lang:ga
Map Type:Ireland Central Dublin
Pushpin Map Caption:Location within Central Dublin
Building Type:Courthouse
Architectural Style:Modern
Address:Parkgate Street, Dublin 8
Location City:Dublin
Location Country:Ireland
Coordinates:53.3486°N -6.2957°W
Altitude:10 m (31 ft)
Groundbreaking Date:2007
Opened Date:January 2010
Destruction Date:-->
Cost:140 million[1]
Owner:Courts Service
Height:32 m (105 ft)
Diameter:40 m (131 ft)
Material:reinforced concrete, glass, timber
Floor Count:11
Floor Area:25,000 m2 (270,000 sq ft)
Elevator Count:27
Grounds Area:0.95 hectare (2.3 acre)
Architect:Peter McGovern
Architecture Firm:Henry J. Lyons & Partners
Services Engineer:J.V. Tierney & Co. Consulting Engineers
Awards:Public Choice Award / Best Accessible Award 2010[2]
Rooms:600+
Parking:72 spaces on-site

The Criminal Courts of Justice (Irish: Na Cúirteanna Breithiúnais Coiriúla) is the principal courts building for the criminal courts in the Republic of Ireland.[3] [4] It stands on Parkgate Street, near the Phoenix Park.[3] [4]

History

The court building, which officially opened in January 2010, replaced the Four Courts and other buildings as the location for most criminal matters before the Dublin Metropolitan District Court and Dublin Circuit Court. The complex also houses the regular sittings of the Central Criminal Court, Special Criminal Court and is home to the criminal division of the Court of Appeal. The Four Courts and Green Street Court House are still used for civil cases.[3] [4]

In a change from previous older courts buildings in Ireland, the building has facilities to hold up to 100 prisoners in the basement, with separate entrances for each court.[3] Jurors are also based in a separate part of the building with their own court entrances after being empanelled, in order to keep them separate from the public.[3] Victims and victim support organisations also have use of a suite of rooms.[3]

The building contains rooms for 150 barristers as well as offices for Gardaí, the Director of Public Prosecutions, Probation Service, Law Society of Ireland, judges' chambers, press rooms and court administration.[3]

The building is owned by International Public Partnerships, a London listed fund managed by Amber Infrastructure Partners under a 25 year concession from April 2007.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Criminal Courts of Justice - - Irish Building Magazine.ie - Ireland's Leading Construction News & Information Portal. Irish building magazine. 2017-02-17. 2017-02-18. https://web.archive.org/web/20170218063505/https://www.irishbuildingmagazine.ie/2010/11/14/criminal-courts-of-justice/. live.
  2. Web site: The Criminal Courts of Justice - - Irish Architecture Gallery. www.irisharchitectureawards.ie. 2017-02-17. 2017-06-13. https://web.archive.org/web/20170613181854/http://www.irisharchitectureawards.ie/annual-awards/2010/the-criminal-courts-of-justice. live.
  3. http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2009/1124/1224259339011.html First case set for new criminal courts
  4. http://www.independent.ie/national-news/new-order-in-court-as-8364140m-legal-pantheon-opens-doors-1951951.html New order in court as €140m legal 'Pantheon' opens doors
  5. Web site: Dublin Criminal Courts Amber . www.amberinfrastructure.com . 22 February 2024.