
HE look of shopfronts in Dublin City Centre is in
freefall, owing to an absence of effective planning
enforcement for shopfront planning permissions and
unauthorised shopfronts, signage and uses.
While Grafron St and environs and oft-maligned O’Connell
St have developed some shopfront pride over the last decade,
the streets nearest the Liffey – Capel St, Westmoreland Street,
Dame Street, Parliament Street, Temple Bar generally and the
Quays – are becoming black spots of lower-order shops and fast-
food restaurants with cheap, garish shopfronts and signage.
The increased problem of poor quality shopfronts is city-wide,
but is most insidious in these streets because they comprise the
most visible areas of the city to visitors, right on the tourism
nodes of Trinity College, Dublin Castle and our renowned ‘cultural
quarter’, Temple Bar; and set a tone for the country beyond.
The Council has granted permission for too many licensed
premises and fast-food take-aways in the area in contradiction of
its development-plan policies to ensure a balanced mix of uses on
city streets and prevent an over-concentration of this use but it is
also not good at maintaining the public spaces entrusted to it. For
example the quality of the pervasive new granite around the city
is dubious – arguably it does not have any of the qualities, such
as imperviousness, required of that substance. And the Council
is not good at maintaining the beautiful old granite kerbing.
The recession is creating a big increase in closure and
vacancy rates, and a proliferation of discount shops, and
other outlets who compete for the cheap and cheerful look
that might just denote better value, in an era when the
signal it gives about quality is ignored. In this environment,
increased vigilance is needed to uphold standards and
prevent major deterioration in streets. Instead, there
seems to be no planning enforcement in operation at all.
The City Council’s never-too-dynamic Planning Enforcement
department has been cut back and
its staff reduced to a bare minimum.
Enforcement is a ‘frontline’ planning
service and should be the last area to
be cut back. The City Council Roads
Department, for example, would
appear to be inefficient and profligate
(a survey by An Taisce in September
2010 found more than one hundred
bare and redundant traffic poles
standing in prominent locations around the city
centre. A pole costs the taxpayer €500 to erect!)
The lack of enforcement and active management
of streets contributes to the ongoing loss of
independent shops and businesses with ‘personality’
– as exemplified by the recent closures of the Opus
music store on South Great Georges St and the replacement
in Temple Bar of Fitzers and then Frankie’s Steakhouse with
a McDonalds and of Bruno’s restaurant with a Café Costa.
Dublin lacks ‘institutional’ stores and shops that are
passed from one generation to the next. In a boom-town
with feeble planning regulation, why
not
make Daddy’s toy-
shop into a themed super pub (with toys in the window)?
The condition of the area is at odds with the designations of
Conservation Areas, Areas of Special Planning Control, Protected
Structures, land-use zoning, the shopfront design guidelines etc.
During the boom years An Bord Pleanála could generally be
relied upon to overturn and curtail the give-permission-at-all-cost
approach of Dublin City Council planning department. However
it has more recently reflected a permissive attitude concerning
certain ‘lower order’ uses in the Capital’s city centre.
Kevin Duff is a Dublin City Association member of An Taisce
NEWS SHOPFRONTS
Dublindictment
Dublin city centre is a mess. By .
Westmoreland Street, Dublin 2: messy
Poles
Before: Historic kerb, Bull Alley Street, Dublin 8
After: First repair in white granite, 2012 (DCC Roads Maintenance). Once it gets in,
the way is open for more.
26 — village October – November 2013