Dundrum used to be a crossroads village on the way to Enniskerry and the Dublin Mountains. Its first shopping centre – a very basic L-shaped block set in an extensive surface car park – was opened in 1971 to cater for residents of new housing estates in the vicinity. More than three decades later, it was transformed forever by Dundrum Town Centre, one of the largest indoor retail meccas in Ireland.
Now it’s set to be engulfed by a gargantuan development of 881 apartments in 11 blocks, rising from five storeys on Main Street to nine-12 storeys along Dundrum Bypass. It would also include a 16-storey “landmark gateway” tower, at the northern end of the old shopping centre’s 3.5-hectare (8.7-acre) site, that would compete with the 50m-tall pylon of the William Dargan Luas bridge for prominence on the skyline.
The real irony is that this “strategic housing development” (SHD) scheme was submitted directly to An Bord Pleanála by Hammerson Allianz on April 5th, less than four weeks after Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council formally adopted its new county development plan for the next six years – and thus pre-empts one of its principal objectives: to complete the preparation of a statutory Local Area Plan for Dundrum.
The new county plan specifically refers to the old shopping centre site and lays down a series of objectives aimed at ensuring that its future development would include a community, cultural and civic centre for Dundrum. It also states that “building heights alongside Main Street must be sensitive to the original streetscape, in keeping with its character, scale and candidate Architectural Conservation Area [ACA]status”.
Hammerson Allianz is seeking permission to demolish “all existing buildings on site” apart from a row of three houses known as Glenville Terrace. These would include several buildings on Main Street that contribute to the character of Dundrum, which the developers claim are “in a poor state of repair” and/or “not functionally compatible with modern commercial use” as well as standing in the way of achieving a “new high quality cohesive streetscape”.
Yet the proposed replacement five-storey blocks would present a jagged building line along the west side of Main Street, recreating on a larger scale the “disjointed streetscape” that they cite as a justification for getting rid of most of the existing buildings – even though these are specifically mentioned in the county council’s November 2021 “character appraisal” and detailed mapping of Dundrum’s proposed ACA.
According to London-based Grid Architects, who have designed it all for Hammerson Allianz, “the vision is to deliver a contemporary and vibrant place to live, underpinned by the re-establishment of the traditional shopping thoroughfare along Dundrum Main Street [and to] create new public spaces within and through the [old shopping centre] site, alongside a series of connected and landscaped courtyard developments”.
Scale of the scheme
It would be impossible to overstate the scale of this scheme, which comes with a gross floor area of 88,442sq m – not far short of one million square feet. The vast bulk of it (95 per cent) would be residential, comprising a mix of one, two and three-bedroom apartments, with minimal provision of car parking (320 spaces) as well as a foodstore, creche, three cafe/restaurants and 10 retail units, mostly on Main Street.
Hammerson Allianz’s planning consultants, BMA, say the density of new housing is justified on the basis that there are only 47 residential units within the overall site embracing Dundrum Town Centre, including the Parochial House of Holy Cross Church. Thus, the provision of 881 apartments on the old shopping centre site “will help to redress a significant deficit in residential use… and produce a more vibrant town centre”.
Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown’s architects’ department was deeply dubious about the “homogenous height, massing, scale and repetitive nature” of the four five-storey blocks proposed for Main Street. As for Grid Architects’ phalanx of much taller buildings along Dundrum Bypass, even with breaks to provide new routes through the site, the view was that this would present a “monolithic face” to the west.
Local people
Not long after Hammerson acquired the old shopping centre in 2016, a group of civic-minded local people inspired by community place-making initiatives in the US set up Imagine Dundrum to campaign for a balanced development of the site, including residential, office, retail and leisure uses, “with a civic, community and cultural centre at its heart”. Their high hopes have been dashed by what is proposed.
Cllr Anne Colgan (Ind), who chairs Imagine Dundrum, is overwhelmed by sadness and regret that UK-based Hammerson failed to engage with the group on how best to redevelop the site, and now they were faced with this “gigantic” scheme that its planning consultant, Brendan Buck, said would “alter the site in a profoundly negative manner” and “look relentlessly large” from many viewpoints in and around Dundrum.
It was probably inevitable, however, that Hammerson would avail of the unrivalled opportunity of progressing it as an SHD application direct to An Bord Pleanála just before the shutters came down on this fast-track route to secure permission for a scheme that would almost certainly be refused outright by Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council because of its overwhelming height, scale, massing and bulk.
What’s happening in Dundrum is the latest example of how Ireland’s planning system has been upended – firstly by Simon Coveney’s introduction in 2016 of legislation to permit all housing schemes of more than 100 units to go direct to An Bord Pleanála and, secondly, by Eoghan Murphy’s mandatory ministerial planning guidelines in 2018 promoting high-rise construction as well as lucrative build-to-rent (BTR) developments.
Free-for-all mania
All of this was done at the behest of the property lobby and directly resulted in the free-for-all mania that has gripped the planning process in recent years, with an army of architects, planning consultants and others involved in the aptly named Planning-Industrial Complex earning huge fees from drawing up and arguing for high-rise housing schemes – usually in defiance of democratically adopted city and county plans.
The negative impacts of tweaking the planning system to facilitate the financialisation of Irish housing will be felt for years to come, leaving us with a legacy of dense, expensive rental housing schemes. And while the Hammerson Allianz plan to remake Dundrum is not billed as BTR, its imposition on the area will be no less severe if it is waved through, like so many other overblown high-rise schemes, by An Bord Pleanála.
Anyone wishing to do so can make their “observations” to the board by close of business on Monday next, May 9th. The ABP reference number is 313220.
Frank McDonald is a former environment editor of The Irish Times