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Airbnb hopes for luck of the Irish with pub-like Dublin offices by Heneghan Peng

Home rental website Airbnb has opened an office in Dublin with a reception area modelled on an Irish pub designed by local architects Heneghan Peng (+ slideshow).

Heneghan Peng were given a brief by Airbnb to create a series of open and collaborative workspaces similar to the company's San Francisco headquarters.

The architects designed a horseshoe-shaped bar in dark wood to mimic the interior of traditional pubs found across the city.

The bar is complete with bottles around the top, candelabras at both ends and a suit of armour that is posed to be having a drink between the stools.

Tables and chairs in the adjacent presentation space are also modelled on typical pub furniture, and the ceiling and flooring echo the decor of drinking venues from different eras.

Continuing the local theme, a pair of green and beige Irish telephone boxes form booths for private phone calls.

Heneghan Peng also included the 12-metre-long bench it designed for Ireland's Venice Biennale pavilion in 2012, which dips and rises as users sit on different sections.

Throughout the office are a series of meeting pods made from oriented strand board, with interiors designed to look like apartments listed on Airbnb from cities across the world.

These rooms are glazed on opposite walls and the name of the city that the design is based upon is written on the side.

Some have seating set into the outside walls for employees to sit and chat in, designed to look like different spaces from the same apartment.

Other larger pods are hinged at the centre so they can be rolled apart to split them into two meeting rooms.

Giant wooden steps are scattered with cushions to create an informal meeting area or workspace.

Photography is by Ed Reeve.

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