Mayor welcomes reopening of Grafton Street Bewleys

One of Dublin's best-loved shops reopened today after a six-month revamp.

One of Dublin's best-loved shops reopened today after a six-month revamp.

The Bewley's cafe on Grafton Street, opened in 1926 but closed its doors last November after owners Campbell Bewley Group blamed the high cost of rent and insurance rates for losses.

However a Save Bewley's Cafe Campaign led by Lord Mayor Cllr Michael Conaghan succeeded in luring entrepreneurs Jay Bourke and Eoin Foyle to attempt to make the cafe a viable proposition.

Cllr Conaghan said today: "I think Bewley's on Grafton Street is safe now. We've managed to marry business and heritage concerns to keep it open and help make it sustainable."

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Mr Bourke and Mr Foyle own Sherland Entertainments, which operate several bars and restaurants in Dublin including Cafe Bar Deli, Eden, Odessa, the Market Bar and the Ri Ra nightclub.

Bewley's traditional cafe and patisserie will remain on the ground floor while first floor will house a fish restaurant called Mackerel. Bewley's Cafe Theatre will be reinstated on the top floor of the building, with cabaret and jazz performances at evenings.

Cllr Conaghan said plans are continuing to save the longer-established Bewley's premises on Westmoreland Street, which also closed last November.

"We will fight on but I think we have set a precedent with Grafton Street that business and heritage can co-exist successfully," he said.

Extensive remodelling and renovation has retained the famous Harry Clarke stained-glass windows installed by the Bewley family in the 1920s.

Loved by Dubliners and tourists for its coffee and sticky buns, Bewleys cafes were an integral part of city life and frequented by literary figures like James Joyce and Patrick Kavanagh.

PA