The Great South Wall roundhead at Poolbeg Lighthouse has reopened to the public following the completion of €2.5 million in remedial works by Dublin Port.
The project addressed damage caused by December’s Storm Bram, one of the most severe storms recorded on the Irish Sea in recent years.
Contractor Murphy replaced and reinforced rock armour around the roundhead, restoring the breakwater’s design profile and strengthening protection for the busy Dublin Port shipping channel.
Stress scan – Survey mapping highlights pressure points along the Great South Wall, guiding €2.5m reinforcement works to stabilise the Poolbeg roundhead after storm damage
Works were carried out in challenging conditions, including limited availability of specialist rock, tight mobilisation timelines and frequent weather disruption. Operations also continued alongside a shipping corridor handling around 50 vessel movements daily.
Over recent weeks, 5,000 tonnes of 6–9 tonne rock armour, sourced from Arklow, Co Wicklow, were transported by barge and placed using a 150-tonne long-reach handler.
Dublin Port said the upgraded structure will help safeguard the wall against increasingly severe wave conditions linked to climate pressures.
Rock rebuild – Heavy machinery places new armour at Poolbeg Lighthouse as Dublin Port completes €2.5m repairs, restoring the roundhead and reopening public access
Port Engineer Eamon McElroy said monitoring “showed movement in the existing rock armour that required immediate action,” adding the works form part of a wider coastal protection strategy.
Murphy Projects Director Tom Sheehy said the team had “reinforced and futureproofed a landmark that is loved by thousands and essential to Ireland’s maritime future.”
Built between 1720 and 1795, the Great South Wall stretches nearly 5km and protects a channel handling €165 billion in trade and 1.7 million passengers annually.
The site, located within the UNESCO-designated Dublin Bay Biosphere, remains a key piece of national infrastructure and heritage.


















































