64September/October 2015
ENVIRONMENT Wolfe Tone Park
A
FTER years of Dublin City
Council (DCC) vandalism and
neglect, its senior manage-
ment has conceded that that
the current layout of Wolfe
Tone Park which it manages – and
indeed designs – has not worked, and
redevelopment is being considered.
But are DCC capable of appropriately
redeveloping the park; and, can they be
trusted to?
Wolfe Tone Park is located on the site
of the old St Marys Churchyard: the
cemetery attached to the church on
Mary Street, opposite the Jervis St Shop-
ing Centre. For almost three centuries
the park served the community and its
visitors as a place to respect the dead
and, later, a place to embrace the living.
Local residents share fond memories
of the park as their childhood play-
ground and communal garden, while
photographs reveal the park as a popu-
lar sanctuary for respite in a busy
city-centre. However, with the arrival of
the Jervis Centre and a desire to extend
the success of Henry St as far as Capel
St, the City Council considered there
was an imperative to cater for com-
merce, and the tired shopper – more
than beleaguered inner city residents
The graves, railings and grass were removed from Wolfe Tone Park,
leaving it depressing and sterile. By Ciaran Flynn
Tone deaf
Wolfe Tone Park in the 1990s (left) and 2015 (right)
a popular Wolfe Tone Park in the 1990s (left) and
the redeveloped plaza in July 2015 (right)
the commonplace vandalism of relics in Wolfe
Tone Park by Dublin City Council
September/October 2015 65
whose voice rarely registers with usu-
ally suburban decision-makers. In this
case residents too were content with
changes in the belief that the walls and
railings conduced to “anti-social behav-
iour” and made it difficult to police the
park. In the event, there has been no
diminution of obnoxious gatherings in
the park. The space and indeed the area
are so hostile to children and families
that it is inevitable there will be drink-
ing and the public carousing that
characterises much activity in many of
Irelands urban parks.
The slate was clean for DCC to rede-
velop the park into a faux
European-style plaza. In  the park
garden and railings were removed, and
the headstones, which had been
uprooted years before, re-arranged to
accommodate a bland, windswept plaza
furnished with a bleak array of concrete
plinths that serve as seating. The new
and voguish plaza was described as an
“urban beach” by Boyd Cody Architects
which won the architectural competi-
tion to overhaul the park for DCC, but
the grass that was its centrepiece has
long-since been removed by the DCC,
without any attempt to obtain planning
permission or to assess the environ-
mental impact. St Mary’s Church, the
oldest parish church in Dublin and one
of its most important buildings has been
converted to pub use, with drinkers
swilling over memorial headstones in a
Wren-quality building that deserves
more dignity.
Since , the park has been com-
mercialised and sterilised by DCC. Like
waves eroding a cliff-face, under-at-
tended gaudy events and commercial
promotions consume what remains of
the park. One TV production, ‘The
Box, did enough damage to warrant the
closure of the park to the public for
three months as the last solitary wedge
of grass was removed to make way for
the brown desert-like deposit that can
be seen there today.
However, applying the cautionary
theory of the broken window – where
tolerance of a single act of vandalism
encourages others to vandalise – DCC
cast the first stone.
DCC continues to renege on a 
commitment to restore the park while
facilitating and effecting damage to, and
disparagement of, the relics of the origi-
nal setting.
Many of the headstones around the
Just Green
‘Jervis St’ Park
66September/October 2015
ENVIRONMENT Wolfe Tone Park
park have been defaced, and some
broken by DCC’s own vehicles; other
vehicles are permitted to join in the
destruction while conducting typically
tasteless events. Reports of infringe-
ment to DCC are met with apathy; we do
not know of a single resident complaint
or concern that has been heeded by the
council in relation to Wolfe Tone Park.
For years the park has been used to
house what is believed to be, a DCC sta
toilet within a vandalised metal con-
tainer. DCC staff occupy the parking
bays on the west side of the park; identi-
fiable by the branded vests draped over
the steering wheels.
A ‘Dublin City Centre BID [Business
Improvement District] Company Ltd
(BID) information kiosk was wheeled
into the park, presumably from Henry
Street, and has been abandoned for the
past few months. The DCC litter helpline
failed to have the obstruction removed;
suggesting either a lack of willingness
or control.
Suppliers of goods and services to the
Church Bar regularly park their vehicles
on the north end, while ordinary resi-
dents and visitors anxiously await the
next time we are a few minutes late
returning to our clamped cars on Jervis
Street – that is, if indeed, we can find a
vacant space to begin with.
Today the park is closed to the public,
hidden behind black hoardings and
beneath the stage of Dublin
Fringe Festival Ltd’s Spiegeltent;
another antisocial event that will broad-
cast amplified music into the homes of
residents living only fifteen meters away
for the next three weeks. It is clear that
the park, which should be an amenity
for hard-pressed residents in one of the
least green parts of the city, is an inap-
propriate venue for events such as
funfairs and ice rinks, but despite
appeals and objections from local resi-
dents DCC have granted permission for
the Tiger Beer Dublin Fringe Festival
circus. Of concern too is that, after
months of objections and requests for
information, residents were directly
informed that permission for the event
had been granted only hours before the
circus rolled into the park. This would
suggest that the event was advertised
long before permission was granted, or
that DCC waited until the eleventh hour
to notify the residents that permission
had been granted for the amplified
music event that will run until at least
pm/am for three weeks in
September.
Perhaps deluded by group-think,
encouraged by internal back-slapping,
or empowered by commercial belly-
scratching DCC staff appear oblivious of
their own contribution to the demise of
the park.
At a DCC/BID meeting in March, BID
members proposed that the park be
rebranded as “Wolfe Tone Square” in a
cynical attempt to lower public expecta-
tions of ‘the space.
Discussions also took place about the
commercial value of ‘the square’ and the
idea of extending the park into a neigh-
bouring business that would accept a
rent from the council. This fee would, of
course, be offset by other commercial
ventures proposed for the park. But why
would DCC consider another circus tent,
Spiegeltent, carnival, Ferris wheel, ad-
space, or coffee kiosk over a simple
garden park contained within tradi-
tional railings in an area deprived of
green space?
While some may suspect that DCCs
failure to provide a public green space is
a carefully engineered softening-up
exercise to push through BIDs commer-
cial proposal, it might very well be the
case that DCC are just not up to the task
of developing or maintaining Wolfe
Tone Park.
In any case, Dublin City BID Company
Ltd (BID) should not be leading a pro-
posed redevelopment of a public space;
and DCC should surrender the public
asset, that they have destroyed, to the
Office of Public Works (OPW). The
handover should be simple: the OPW can
easily be found in Dublin, maintaining
St Stephen’s Green and The Phoenix
Park.
In safer hands the park walls and rail-
ings, still stored in DCCs Marrowbone
Lane depot, should be reinstated, and
apologies offered all around. The mes-
sage on Wolfe Tone Park and other
parks for DCC from those who actually
live in the inner city is simple: just green
them. •
For more information on the campaign
to restore Wolfe Tone Park visit
WolfeTonePark.com
Dublin City Council has parked its staff welfare cabin along Wolfe Tone Park, for years
the Park closed for
three weeks for the
Tiger Beer Dublin
Fringe Festival Ltd
Spiegeltent
September/October 2015 67
A judge in Morocco who orders a 16 year old girl
to marry her rapist so that he escapes prosecution.
‘MEMBER’

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