Experiencing Dublin's docklands: Perceptions of employment and amenity changes in the Sheriff Street community
Publication date
2012
Authors
Doucet, B.M.
Duignan, E.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
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License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
Flagship projects and gentrification have a profound impact on the neighbourhoods
which surround them. At present, most studies focus on their housing
implications. We seek to engage in a broader understanding of their effects by
examining the ways in which residents of a low-income neighbourhood adjacent
to a new waterfront development perceive and experience changes in employment
opportunities and local amenities which have arisen because of this project. We
will examine the discourses of long-term residents (those residing for more than
25 years) of the Sheriff Street neighbourhood one of the city’s most deprived
towards the new Dublin Docklands and its International Financial Services
Centre (IFSC). This type of engagement with non-gentrifying groups is currently
lacking from academic research and consequently limits our full understanding of
the impact of these spaces.What we have found is a complex and nuanced picture,
where residents are both optimistic and disappointed by the impact the project
has had on their lives. Through the addition of new amenities catering to middleclass
users, the Docklands reinforces old, and creates new, socio-economic
divisions within the area.
Keywords
gentrification, flagship regeneration, waterfronts, employment and amenities, Dublin