share this page

Crawford 100


On January 16th, 1912, the Right Honourable Lord Mayor of Cork, Alderman James Simcox, formally opened the Crawford Municipal Technical Institute (CMTI) at Sharman Crawford Street, Cork.

Close to 800 students were enrolled in classes in the new building, for technical instruction in areas as diverse as botany & gardening, building construction & builders’ quantities, carpentry & joinery, chemistry & physics, domestic science (including cookery, laundry, dress making, millinery), electrical engineering, materia medica, mechanical engineering, plumbing, tailors’ cutting, typography, painting, decorating & drawing.

The site, formerly home to Arnott’s Brewery, had been donated for this purpose by Mr. A. F. Sharman Crawford*, and Mr. Arthur Hill was appointed as Architect. The contractor was Mr. Samuel Hill, and the building was built for the princely sum of £800.

The Cork Examiner report of the official opening described the building as a “noteworthy addition to the public edifices in the city” while the attendance drawn from civic dignitaries and all walks of Cork’s commercial and industrial life was termed “very large and distinguished”. Few if any among that distinguished gathering could have predicted how influential that building would be over the next 100 years. Since 1912 it has contributed enormously to industrial, commercial and artistic development in Cork city and the wider region. It was a key centre for technical and technological education, and a noted centre nationally for the promotion of lifelong learning. It was a forerunner of what is now Cork Institute of Technology (CIT), and the National Maritime College of Ireland (NMCI).

Industries such as the motor industry (now discontinued alas since the demise of Fords), the construction industry, the electronics industry and the pharmaceutical industry, were all supplied by graduates from the CMTI. Other contributions throughout the last 100 years include the Diploma in Rural Science, a teacher training course for rural science teachers, many of whom went on to make great contributions to Irish society in later years.

Today the Sharman Crawford site is home to CIT Crawford College of Art & Design, which relocated to the site following the establishment of Cork Regional Technical College in Bishopstown. The educational legacy lives on through the contribution of new generations of art graduates.

Throughout 2012, a series of events will be held to commemorate and celebrate 100 years of education at Sharman Crawford Street. The celebrations will commence officially on Friday January 20th at 7pm, with a special evening to remember the circumstances of the original opening, 100 years previously.

11th May 2012
Canon James Simcox. grandson of Ald. Simcox, presents a replica key of the CMTI to Dr Barry O'Connor, Registrar and Vice President of Academic Affairs, CIT.
read more

*Mr. A. F. Sharman Crawford (1862 – 1943), Justice of the Peace for Co. Cork and Vice-Chairman of the Cork Technical Instruction Committee, was a yachtsman and a founder member of Cork Golf Club. His family was associated with numerous acts of philanthropy around the turn of the century. Celebrating 100 years of Education
at Sharman Crawford Street
© 2023 - Munster Technological University - MTU