Why do Dubliners suddenly love Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre?

Planning permission to knock it has awakened a new appreciation for the shopping centre

Listen | 19:55
Dublin residents give their views on the plans for Stephen's Green Shopping Centre. Video: Alan Betson

When Dubliners first saw the multi-tiered, gleaming white, iron and glass shopping centre on St Stephen’s Green in the late 1980s, it was quickly nicknamed “the Mississippi showboat” and “the wedding cake”. And in a city that prides itself on its Georgian heritage and its historic buildings, it was seen by some as kitsch, an architectural pastiche and a bit embarrassing. But it grew on others.

Now that plans have been approved by Dublin City Council to knock the shopping centre and replace it with a new scheme, a campaign has begun to save the centre.

Stephen Murphy from Killester protesting outside the St Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre in Dublin in response to the proposed redevelopment of the building. Photograph: Bryan O’Brien
Stephen Murphy from Killester protesting outside the St Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre in Dublin in response to the proposed redevelopment of the building. Photograph: Bryan O’Brien

So what is planned to replace it? Why are objectors so against it? And why do so many people have a new appreciation for this “historic” building?

Dublin Editor Olivia Kelly isn’t one to sit on the fence when it comes to how the city is shaping up and she explains her reservations about the plans.

Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Suzanne Brennan.

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison is an Irish Times journalist and cohost of In the News podcast

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