Irish Independent

MANHATTAN PENTHOUSE

The Scanlans loved The Warehouse so much they bought two units, writes Mark Keenan

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As The Warehouse heads for its 20th birthday we talk to the owners of its top pad

34 The Warehouse Clanbrassi­l Terrace, Blackpitts, Dublin 8

ASKING PRICE: €850,000

AGENT: Gallagher Quigley, (01) 818 3000

FOREIGN executives who come to live in Dublin and seek more salubrious apartment accommodat­ion are often surprised to find that, uniquely among world capitals, there are almost no Manhattans­tyle lofts to be had. The style is termed after the swanky industrial conversion­s on Manhattan island which came about in the 1930s and 1940s when artists began occupying New York’s disused factory spaces. Some of Manhattan’s loft apartments change hands for €50m today.

Perhaps the most famous of them all was Andy Warhol’s first Factory in a loft at 231 East

47 th Street, which he rented in 1962 for a hundred dollars a year and wallpapere­d in tinfoil.

Since the trend began in Manhattan, almost every modern capital that saw central industrial spaces winding down, experience­d many of them renewed again with vigour as residences of difference. The city warehouse apartment is typically characteri­sed by its central location, wide open-plan layouts, robust industrial style flooring and windows and very high ceilings.

Unfortunat­ely the preference of Irish developers has long been to knock old industrial buildings down and build anew. Almost alone among the bland new apartment blocks is The Warehouse at Clanbrassi­l Terrace, in Blackpitts, Dublin 8 which was, until 1999, the Crowe and Wilson clothing factory.

This factory must have been substantia­l in its day. A 1960 newspaper advert proclaimin­g the sale of O’Beirne’s Pub at 1 Usher’s Quay cited among the business’s commercial selling points the presence of the Crowe and Wilson plant (presumably a rich source of patrons) and this despite the factory being almost a kilometre away.

The 1940s building was redevelope­d in 1999 by developer Michael Roden who recognised the character of the flat roofed, red-bricked four storey block and engaged architect Mary Donohue to remodel it into a Manhattan project with a difference. Next year marks the

20th anniversar­y of its rebirth. Among the most enthusiast­ic occupiers in the Warehouse’s 19 years have been childhood sweetheart­s Robbie and Karen Scanlan, today the owners of Tipperary Crystal. Back in 2000, as a young childless couple they bought Number 22, a one-bed on the first floor. Two years later in 2002, they heard that Roden might be selling Number 34, The Penthouse and got in touch with him.

“He did the deal. And we were delighted,” says Robbie, who is MD at Tipperary Crystal. The couple lived there until 2005 when, with a second child on the way, they moved on to their current address in Portmarnoc­k.

“It was perfect for us at the time, a young couple who liked to enjoy life to the full,” says Robbie.

“We were right in the centre of things with all the cool hipster cafés running along that Camden to George’s Street stretch, a few minutes’ walk from Grafton Street. This is the real Dublin. We’d go to the Westbury for lunch. We had a sunny south-west facing roof terrace to sit out on in the summer evenings and it’s a great pad for entertaini­ng at home.”

“The sizes of the apartments and the ceiling heights really impressed me,” says Karen, who is creative director at Tipperary Crystal. “I remember being struck by the great big spaces — all open-plan areas with a big living area and huge kitchen just like the ones you’d see on TV in the American films. And then later when we moved up to Number 34 we got that extra bedroom and a lovely reclaimed parquet floor. You’ve got these huge windows that run the full width of the rooms.”

When more children arrived the couple traded up to a family house in Portmarnoc­k, but held on to Number 34 as an investment. Recently with a view to selling it the couple brought in the interior designer, Suzanne Fanning of Cornerston­e to completely redo the apartment for sale. She furnished it through Wow Interiors. And this week, as the Scanlans place their loft penthouse on the market, they’ve come back to the building and their former home.

“One thing I’d forgotten is how very peaceful it is, being on the top floor,” says Karen. “It’s also very secure and very safe with a full-time caretaker on site.”

Their two-bedroom penthouse ranges over two floors and measures 2,000 sq ft, almost twice the size of an average three bedroom semi. The accommodat­ion includes two southwest facing terraces and the developmen­t has a communal courtyard at its centre as well as a glass brick floored open core near the top. The couple are asking €850,000 through the Gallagher Quigley agency.

You are greeted by a very large sitting room with a large skylight and staircase to the lower floor. Off the sitting room is a built-in storage area, utility room and bathroom. On the far side of the staircase is a double bedroom with wall to wall wardrobes and a south-west facing terrace with fantastic city views.

The lower floor has a large open living, dining and kitchen area also with a south-west facing terrace looking over the city. Off a lobby area in the kitchen is the main bedroom which has a large en-suite bathroom. A designated car parking space is included.

They place it for sale in the same week that two other Warehouse units have gone sale agreed. Number 21, which is the home of fashion designer Jen O’Dwyer, spans 1,020 sq ft and comes with colourful Ivanka floor tiles, was offered for €450,000 by Sherry FitzGerald which also sale agreed Number 16 for €550,000, also 1,020 sq ft.

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 ?? PHOTO: BRYAN MEADE ?? Robbie and Karen Scanlan in the penthouse at Number 34 The Warehouse, Clanbrassi­l Terrace, Dublin 8
PHOTO: BRYAN MEADE Robbie and Karen Scanlan in the penthouse at Number 34 The Warehouse, Clanbrassi­l Terrace, Dublin 8
 ??  ?? Clockwise from above: The open-plan living area on the lower floor at Number 34; one of the two bedrooms; the detail in the upstairs sitting room; the exterior of The Warehouse; the kitchen and dining area; the openplan living room at Number 16, and...
Clockwise from above: The open-plan living area on the lower floor at Number 34; one of the two bedrooms; the detail in the upstairs sitting room; the exterior of The Warehouse; the kitchen and dining area; the openplan living room at Number 16, and...
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