de Paor studied architecture at
TU Dublin (1985–88) and in
UCD (1989–91), where he graduated with first-class honours. He studied horticulture at the Botanic Gardens Dublin (2022-25).
Built works In 1991 he won the international competition for the design of a reception building at the Royal Gunpowder Mills at
Ballincollig,
County Cork, which won an AAI award in 1993 and an RIAI award in 1994. Since then his public portfolio has included landscape and building works to the A13 in
Barking and Dagenham in London (1996), Comhdháil Naisiúnta na Gaeilge Dublin (1999),
Clontarf Pumpstation and public realm (2007),
Druid Theatre Galway (2009) and the Landside Bar at
Dublin airport (2011). de Paor designed the
Pálás cinema in
Galway (2017), which was awarded an AAI and RIAI award for Best Cultural Building, two Irish Concrete Society awards, two Civic Trust awards and a World Architecture Award. He has also designed a number of award-winning retail spaces, one-off houses and gardens, both urban and rural, across Ireland — most notably at Dysart in
Wicklow. His work has been twice nominated for the
EU Mies Van Der Rohe award, in 2005 for Clontarf Pumpstation and Public Realm and in 2007 for John Dillon Street. , Galway. (2017)
Exhibitions In 1999 he contributed to the
Arts Council of Ireland Schools Show and in 2000 he was invited to design the inaugural Irish representation at the
Venice Architecture Biennale and he contributed to subsequent Irish Pavilions in 2006, 2008 and in 2010, which he co-curated. He exhibited in the international pavilion in 2010 and 2018. In 2010 he made a pavilion for EVA International, in 2015 he contributed a board game to The Souvenir Project at LIMINAL, and in 2025 he coauthored the inaugural Royal Hibernian Academy pavilion. In 2022 de Paor staged the retrospective exhibition ‘i see Earth: building and ground: 1991–2021’, supported by the
Arts Council of Ireland,
The Irish Architecture Foundation and Visual Carlow. He also designed two stage sets for
Manchán Magan. His drawings have been exhibited internationally, including the
Royal Academy , and the
Venice Biennale. His notebooks were the subject of an exhibition, and later published. His watercolours were the subject of a solo show at the Sarah Walker Gallery. == Recognition ==