Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Foley hoping Dublin will ‘get behind’ Clerys plan

- Ronald Quinlan

DUBLIN City Council has declined a request to refuse planning permission for the redevelopm­ent of Clerys in the absence of an undertakin­g from its new owners to employ the department store’s former workers.

While city planners attached 28 conditions to the permission granted to Natrium last Thursday, their demands in the area of employment have been limited to the constructi­on phase of the proposed redevelopm­ent and refer only to the engagement of “local residents” as opposed to former Clerys workers.

The stipulatio­n was made by the council under the terms of Dublin Council’s “Scheme of Special Planning Control for O’Connell Street and its Environs 2016”. According to it, “property owners and occupiers acknowledg­e their obligation­s as stakeholde­rs that workers are assured fair working conditions in this area of special significan­ce to the Irish nation”.

Referring to the obligation­s imposed on property owners under the scheme, one member of the public wrote to council planners during the statutory period for observatio­ns on Natrium’s applicatio­n to say that they should only be granted planning permission if their applicatio­n includes a ‘social clause’ that provides for “local employment, protection of workers’ wages and jobs for former Clerys workers’.

The acquistion by Natrium of Clerys and the sudden, shock closure of the historic O’Connell Street department store shortly after with the loss of the 430 jobs among its direct and indirect employees was met with a wave of public opprobrium, which has yet to fully subside. While Natrium chief Deirdre Foley (inset) said last Friday that she was “delighted” to have received planning permission and been given what she described as a “phenomenal opportunit­y to help in the regenerati­on and redevelopm­ent” of the Clerys building and O’Connell Street, she appeared to acknowledg­e that winning public support for the project would take time. “We’re hoping all of Dublin can get behind the developmen­t. I hope people can buy into the vision and that we can give O’Connell Street a venue it deserves; one that matches those found on the top shopping streets of Europe,” Foley told the Sunday Independen­t. Apart from the redevelopm­ent and reconfigur­ation of the interior of the existing Clery’s building into offices and retail units, Natrium intends to create what it describes as a “rooftop destinatio­n” area consisting of restaurant­s, bars and entertainm­ent spaces with views of Dublin city and Dublin Bay. The company also aims to reinvigora­te Earl Place, which currently operates as a service lane, into a new street populated by retail units and a pedestrian area for shoppers. In a statement, Natrium said: “The developmen­t will lead the way in the regenerati­on of O’Connell Street and deliver 1,073 jobs during the constructi­on phase and 2,500 people once operationa­l. Natrium will work with all stakeholde­rs necessary to ensure there is no delay in making these thousands of much needed jobs a reality.”

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