Advert screens to be erected in D4 as part of Dublin Bikes deal

Cycle service could be reduced if panels in Donnybrook and Ballsbridge are not allowed

Computer generated image of proposed sign outside US Embassy on Pembroke Road, Dublin 4
Computer generated image of proposed sign outside US Embassy on Pembroke Road, Dublin 4

Four commercial advertising screens, more than three metres wide and almost six metres tall, are to be erected in the southeast of Dublin city as part of the Dublin Bikes arrangement.

Sites at Donnybrook Road, Shelbourne Road, Pembroke Road and Charlemont Street have been chosen for the screens to fulfil Dublin City Council’s side of the Dublin Bikes deal with advertiser JC Decaux.

The council said that if it did not allow the new structures the bike rental scheme could suffer a reduction in service.

Proposed location of four new JC Decaux advertising panels
Proposed location of four new JC Decaux advertising panels

In 2006 the council signed a contract with JC Decaux, one of the world’s largest outdoor advertising companies, for a bike rental scheme, public toilets, maps and signposts. In exchange the company would have the right to advertising space at a number of locations around the city.

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The original tender was for 120 structures and 450 bikes, but following an appeal to An Bord Pleanála the number of advertising panels was reduced to 72. To retain all the bikes, the toilets were taken out of the deal.

Suitable sites

The bike service began operating in 2009 and was extended in 2010 by 100 bikes. To fund the extension the council agreed to 10 additional advertising screens, six of which have been installed but four of which remain outstanding.

The council’s planning department said it had assessed 50 sites in order to find locations that were commercially viable, accessible for servicing lorries and not constrained by underground utilities or planned developments.

Councillors will today be asked to approve the four suitable sites.

“Failure to provide the outstanding advertising structures can result in a service reduction of the bike scheme and related amenities,” the planning department said.

The bikes/advertising ratio has so far been weighted in favour of the south side of the city, with 65 per cent of the bike stations located south of the river but just 41 per cent of the advertising units. The southeast of Dublin has the highest concentration of bike stations at 47 per cent, but has just 25 per cent of the advertising screens.

The four new screens would be mounted on poles and range in height from almost 5.5m to just over 5.8m, with a maximum width of just under 3.8m.

Separately, the council plans to expand the scheme into the suburbs at a cost of €100 million over a 10-year period through a new advertising screens contract.

New stations

While the new bike stations would be in the suburbs, the advertising would most likely be along busy traffic routes and in the core of the city centre.

“The most commercially efficient sites are located on heavily trafficked radial/orbital routes or within key civic/retail quarters centred on O’Connell Street, College Green, Grafton Street, etc,” the council said.

Since 2014 the scheme has expanded to a total of 1,500 bikes, with the annual operation costs of the extra bikes funded by subscriptions, Coca-Cola sponsorship and by the council. It wants to increase subscription fees from €20 to €30 to help meet the costs. The €100 million investment would provide another 3,500 bikes.

Olivia Kelly

Olivia Kelly

Olivia Kelly is Dublin Editor of The Irish Times