There aren’t too many clients in Galway or in the surrounding area that are as successful when it comes to securing funding for construction work as NUI Galway. JJ Rhatigan & Company, a firm that has been providing construction services for over half a century, have completed several projects at the campus over the past few years and despite strong competition from other construction firms for these projects Rhatigan’s have, more often than not, come out on top.
NUI Galway is on a mission to develop a suite of suitable, high-end accommodation and facilities that will enhance their Research and Innovation offerings. The Research Bundle of Projects and the Arts Millennium Building, both built by JJ Rhatigan & Company, have created landmark buildings for the researchers and students at the campus. The Research Bundle comprised the construction of a bundle of two separate buildings; a stand-alone hi-technology Biosciences Building (BRB) to include high technology laboratories, on the northern part of the NUI Galway campus and an extension to the James Hardiman Library (a protected structure) for the Hardiman Research Building for Arts Humanities and Social Sciences Research (HRB) of approximately 5,500 sq.m., including associated works to the existing building on the main NUI Galway campus. Both of these new buildings allow for the creation of new strands of research that facilitate interaction with local enterprise and other universities like UCC, UCD and TCD.


During the construction of the HRB and the arts millennium extension the campus was actually cut in half which led to the installation of a temporary pedestrian bridge to connect the two sides, maintaining the daily workings of the campus. The project also included associated works to the existing Library and external podium, the re-routing of services and trees and landscaping works to the open areas to the West and South of the building.
The flagship project for the firm has to be the Biosciences Building, an extremely complex stand-alone 4 storey project of hi technology research facilities and office space. Although it’s not located in the heart of the campus but sits on its own site, the brief for the project presented its own challenges. “It’s a highly serviced building that includes a great deal of high-end and very clean laboratories facilities. We had in excess of six people completely dedicated to managing the Mechanical and Electrical services installation working on that project full time. We were also responsible for the supply, procurement, delivery and installation of the specialist equipment required for the building, which was a particular challenge. This isn’t equipment that you’d see in many buildings.” The Rhatigan team were responsible for ensuring the equipment, which included Autoclaves, Medium & Large Sterilisers and Decontamination Chambers, Bio Safety Cabinets and Fumehoods, met the correct specifications that the college required and that it was coordinated and installed efficiently and safely.

The building also includes ultra-clean lab facilities, which required a “Burn-in” period whereby operating systems were fully operational for a continuous 30 day period (overseen by specialist commissioning company The CUBE.) “Once the clean lab was completed, it was decontaminated and sterilised; a notional decontamination barrier was put in place which meant there was strict control and procedures in place for gaining access to the facility; effectively it had to be completely finalised, snagged, commissioned and validated before it could be handed over. To get that up and running, to get the burn in period completed and to achieve the validation and certification of the facility while ensuring the decontamination was completed effectively – all presented their own challenges and required meticulous planning and coordination, which resulted in the whole process going according to plan and certification being achieved at the first attempt.” The innovative solutions employed by the firm have raised the benchmark for third level research and education buildings and cemented NUI Galway’s position as a leader in the field of bioscience research.
Headquartered in Galway, the firm has a particularly strong presence in the West, Midlands, East and North West of the. The Dublin and Sligo offices are also extremely busy at the moment. “We are currently working from Cork and Kerry to Sligo and Donegal and from Dublin in the East to Galway in the West and everywhere in between!” The firm also has a firm foothold in the education sector, a fact that’s reflected in the volume of repeat business with public departments, semi-state bodies and local authorities and in particular with NUI Galway. Currently on site once again at NUI Galway, the firm is constructing the Life Course Studies Institute building on the northern campus adjacent to the BRB, building on the existing relationship with the university. The new 3,600m purpose built building is designed to provide an integrated multidisciplinary solution to the needs of the Social Science Programmes at NUI Galway covering older people, children and family and people with disabilities. “We’ve always given NUI Galway an excellent service and we’ve always delivered on quality, programmes and budget for them. The Buildings Office at NUI Galway are very proactive and easy to work with; they get things done and they have a very good approach in their dealings with the builders as well as everything else. We’re all delighted with the projects in NUI Galway and the reason for the success for these projects is I think the proactive and cooperative way we worked with NUI Galway to deliver the buildings within budget, to their specifications and quality. We had a very rigid set of programme dates in which to complete the projects and we were successful every time. At one stage we were delivering three buildings at the same time and we met each delivery date, to the day. I think that was a fair achievement given the complex nature of the buildings, their location in the heart of the busy NUI Galway Campus all combined with the fact that all our recent work for the university has been on a Design & Build basis.”
This article first appeared in Irish Building Magazine and can be viewed with this link.