Special Event
Special Event

Heritage Week events

16/08/2025 - 19/08/2025

Guided Tours: Saturday 16 August | Talk: Tuesday 19 August

Free events | Bookings open week of 21 July

Photo credit: Chris Southgate and Dr. Colin Rynne

Firkin Crane Theatre, Cork: Heritage Week events

Join us for a Talk & Tour for Heritage Week

Dance Cork Firkin Crane are thrilled to present two special events as part of National Heritage Week, 16 - 24 August 2025.

Guided Tours of Dance Cork Firkin Crane
National Heritage Day Saturday 16 August, Tours at 11:30am, 12:30pm & 1:30pm

Book here >>>
Admission is free, but booking is essential as space is limited, bookings open week of 21 July

Join us for an informative and interactive tour of Dance Cork Firkin Crane to celebrate National Heritage Day. Gain insights into the history of the building right up until its present use as a centre for dance in Cork.

Honouring Heritage, Shaping the Future: The Story and Conservation of the Firkin Crane
Tuesday 19 August
, 11am
Admission is free, but booking is essential as space is limited

Book here >>>

Join us at Dance Cork Firkin Crane for a special Heritage Week event exploring the rich history and ongoing preservation of one of Cork’s most unique and iconic buildings, located in the heart of Shandon. This conversation brings together Dr. Colin Rynne, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Archaeology at University College Cork and author of At the Sign of the Cow: Cork Butter Exchange, 1770–1924, and Chris Southgate, Conservation Engineer and Director of Southgate Associates.

Together, they will reflect on the heritage significance of the Firkin Crane while discussing recent conservation works, including the roof repairs, and the vision guiding its future. They will explore the history of the Butter Market and Exchange,tracing the Firkin Crane’s story within the wider context of Cork’s industrial and social past. Discover how this unique circular structure once stood at the centre of the world’s largest butter trade and how it helped shape the Shandon area as a vibrant hub of commerce and community.

Insights into the development of the building’s Conservation Management Plan, funded by a Community Heritage Grant from the Heritage Council, will also highlight the challenges and opportunities of preserving a historic structure that now serves as a vital space for contemporary dance and communities, while growing toward an accessible, sustainable, and shared future.

This is a unique opportunity to hear from experts in archaeology and conservation engineering, and to explore the intersection of history, architecture, sustainability, and cultural renewal in a lively, informal setting within the Firkin Crane building.

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