Government Buildings Merrion Street, Dublin.Department of the Taoiseach
The Council Chamber (cabinet room) The Department of the Attorney General The Department of Finance Parts of the building, which was formerly the Royal College of
Science, have served as the seat of Irish government since 1922.
Origins The building that was to become Government Buildings was
the last major public building built under British rule in Ireland. The
foundation stone for the building was laid by King Edward VII in 1904.
It was built on the site of a row of Georgian houses that were being
controversially demolished one by one as the new building was erected.
The building itself was designed by Sir Aston Webb, a British architect
who was later to redesign the facade of Buckingham Palace. The final
completed building was opened by King George V in 1911.
It may have been intended for use by the Royal College of
Science, but it soon attracted the attention of the Lord Lieutenant of
Ireland's Dublin Castle administration. It was chosen to be the location
for the first meeting of the new Parliament of Southern Ireland, created
under the Government of Ireland Act, 1920, in June 1921. The planned
State Opening of Parliament proved a fiasco, as only four members of the
House of Commons of Southern Ireland and a minority of members of the
Senate of Southern Ireland turned up. The Houses were adjourned sine die
(though the Commons did come back into session early in 1922 to approve
the Anglo-Irish Treaty).
With the coming into existence of the Irish Free State in
December 1922 Leinster House, the headquarters of the Royal Dublin
Society, located next door to the Royal College of Science, became the
provisional seat of the Free State's parliament, Oireachtas of Saorstát
Éireann. The Executive Council of the Irish Free State immediately
commandeered part of the college as temporary office space. Two years
later the Free State decided to buy Leinster House outright from the
RDS. Government usage of part of the Royal College of Science also
became permanent.
The original government buildings (1922–1991) From 1922 to 1991 the former College of Science building was
divided between a number of bodies. The wing to the right of the main
entrance (the north wing) was used by the Department of the President,
later in 1938 renamed Department of the Taoiseach. The Attorney General,
the Department of Justice and other offices also occupied that wing of
the building. The south wing was occupied permanently by the Department
of Finance. The centre block of the courtyard under the dome was still
used by the Royal College of Science, and later when it merged with
University College Dublin, by students from the Faculty of Engineering.
Over the decades, some departments moved out to purpose built offices,
leaving the north wing for the Taoiseach, Government Secretariat and
Attorney General.
The current Government Buildings In the mid-1980s, increasingly unhappy at the cramped
office space, Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald decided to convert the entire
building for government use. This policy was implemented by his
successor, Charles Haughey, who had the state sell a block of Georgian
houses across the road, which up to then had been in state ownership,
for £17 million to fund the rebuild. A new engineering faculty was also
built on University College Dublin's Belfield campus at tens of millions
of pounds.
Much of the original interior of the original building was gutted
to facilitate the creation of a state-of-the-art new government office.
Haughey finally moved into the new building in 1991. Critics of the
expenditure, at a time when Ireland was in financial difficulties,
nicknamed the building the Chaz Mahal and Charlie Haughey. However
criticism of the redesigned building soon died away and it won major
architectural awards for its design, with world leaders like British
Prime Minister John Major praising it to then Taoiseach Albert Reynolds
when he visited the building to meet him.
The new building included a state-of-the-art suite of offices for
the Taoiseach and his staff, a set of visually striking committee rooms,
new offices, canteen facilities, a helicopter pad and a new press
briefing room. Originally the Office of Public Works had planned a new
cabinet suite of rooms also. However the Government opted to continue to
use the Council Chamber which had been the cabinet room for all Irish
governments since 1922.