The new building has appeared on the edge of Galway's historic center, next to the docks and the banks of the Corrib River. This place was occupied in the past by a Georgian merchant mansion with a garden, and the architects recreated one of its facades: a low building behind it now houses a foyer and a ticket office. The main volume of the cinema is a laconic block with shot-blasted concrete walls. Three rooms are located in the basement and on the third and fourth (upper) floors. The building ends with a traditional slate roof with a weather vane.
All three cinema halls are designed in black and red colors, with draperies on the walls and ceiling and a shallow stage. Stairs play a key role in the image of the interior. The bar is traditionally decorated with precious woods, with a series of small spaces with spectacular perspective views, and the cafe is decorated with glass, mirrors and sapele wood.
Windows by artists Patrick Scott and Eric Pearce deserve a special mention: neon was used as paint in the case of the name of the cinema, or polymers - red for stairs, green on the back facade, amber - in other cases.