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THE CLERYS CLOCK will survive the redevelopment of the landmark O’Connell Street building which closed last year – as architects plan to return the site to its former glory.
Dublin City Council has granted planning permission to the project which will see an extra rooftop level added to the main building and a hotel, shops, office space and restaurants opened on the site.
Other conservation and restoration measures promised by the Natrium consortium include cleaning up the Portland stone facade of the building, reinstatement of existing windows and the restoration of the feature double staircase. When Natrium bought Clerys in June of last year, they immediately closed it down in a shock move that saw the loss of over 450 jobs.
The plans published on Dublin City Council’s website are keen to reference the ambitious past of the building. When Clerys was first built, there was a double-space height on the ground floor – “an element of grandeur” according to architects Henry J Lyons. The new plans propose to insert a glass atrium in the new rooftop level which will deliver light right down to the ground floor.
The internal view from the new main foyer shows the void up to the rooftop atrium providing natural light right down to the foot of the original feature staircase. Henry J Lyons ArchitectsHenry J Lyons Architects
A photograph of Clerys ground floor in the 1930s shows the old double-height space that once opened up the shopping floor.
The basement and first floors of the main building will be dedicated to retail; the ground floor to an entrance and lobby; the second, third and fourth to office space. The new top area – complete with external viewing deck over O’Connell Street and a sunken planted area to the rear – is described in the architects’ plans as a “rooftop destination”.
The Clerys Tea Rooms will be “reinstated” and accessible via a lift and the feature staircase which led into the main ground shopping floor before the department store’s closure.
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The Clerys site isn’t just the area covered by the shopping floors with which we were all familiar. It also stretches back to houses on 94-95 Marlborough Street and to a large warehouse plot – the plan for these is to create a hotel which will have a restaurant/café/bar at its entrance on Earl Place and courtyards and bridge links bringing extra bedrooms and main hotel together.
The houses on Marlborough Street are historically significant – they were built as grand family homes around 1760 and the original chimneys and fireplaces, and as many original other architectural features that remain, will be retained in their refurb as accommodation in the new hotel facility.
The entrance to Earl Place aims to rejuvenate that laneway, pedestrianising it with patrons at the tea rooms on the first floor able to look out through slide-back windows across the entire floor.
The architects claimed in their plans:
O’Connell Street as it stands today has lost its status in all but name as a European capital street; it does not compare favourably with our continental neighbours and the story of this street and of the buildings on this street must now become one of regeneration, rebirth and renaissance.
The building affectionately known to generations of Dubliners as Clerys is located on the site of McSwiney Delaney & Company’s ‘Palatial Mart’, a Victorian department store built in 1853 to coincide with the Dublin International Exhibition. The building was taken over by Michael Clery from Bulgaden, Co Limerick with a consortium of owners (hence the Clerys & Co.) and reopened in 1884 after a year’s hiatus.
Clerys did not avoid the devastation wreaked on then-Sackville Street during the 1916 Rising and the building was entirely destroyed by fire. The current building was opened in August 1922. Its chequered history continued when it went into bankruptcy in 1940, passing eventually to the Guiney family who owned it until 2004.
It was placed into receivership in 2012, and was taken over by the US investment firm Gordon Brothers. They in turn sold it for €29 million to the Natrium consortium headed up by Deirdre Foley, John Skelly and Ronan Daly. You can read more about that consortium here.
The Irish Times has reported that Natrium has said the new development will eventually employ 2,500 people. When Clerys closed suddenly last year, workers held emergency meetings with Siptu and there was heavy criticism of the manner in which employees and concession owners were informed of their fate.
One year on, some former Clerys workers told TheJournal.ie that they had won entitlements following a battle backed by Siptu but felt there was a review needed of legislation protecting employee interests “when assets are separated from an operating company”.
There were 43 letters of objection to the plans submitted to Dublin City Council, among them complaints from former workers, as well as councillors Ciarán Cuff of the Green Party and independent Nial Ring.
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I’m sure lots of people throw a bet for a bit of fun. But, I can’t help but think that lots of people are going without the basics to keep Paddy in €69 million profit.
Great to see the UK and Irish governments indirectly helping out paddy power in the form of dole payments!
its insane that we see more of these shops up and down the country at the one time that people should not be wasting money on such nonsense,
either these types of shops should be more heavily restricted or there has to be a way to restrict how dole money can be spent…because betting is not an acceptable use!
Why should the shops be restricted!?! It’s a person’s own decision to go in there & bet their money!! If it turns out that the money being punted originated as a welfare payment then more-fool us, as a state, for giving it to them!!
They don’t need the chinese to help em, we’re not shy of a bet or two. But your right the chinese and a few more Asian countries have the gambling gene big style..
No substance ? I bought some of their shares 18 months ago at €27 each, today they’re worth €52 each, I’ve nearly doubled my money on them so for me they have plenty of substance to go with their style. Paddy Power are one of the most profitable Irish companies about and if they manage to crack the US and Canadian markets that share price will go even higher up towards €70.
And you don’t know what you’re talking about Steve.
I don’t dispute their business acumen. They provide a lot of jobs here and I applaud them for it.
But their success is based on clever marketing and the ability to attract the casual punter that doesn’t particularly care about things like low limits and lousy margins, in contrast to somewhere like Pinnacle where competitiveness pricing and limits are everything.
Paddy Power is not a place for serious punters and any book that offers odds on a market and then only allows a customer to place less than a tenner on it is Mickey Mouse in my book.
And I can assure you I know what I’m talking about.
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