DUBLIN CITY planners are to meet public representatives on proposals
for a €65 million, mixed-use development based around a new Islamic
cultural centre on the city’s northern fringe.
The council is
currently considering a planning application which includes a large
mosque, a 34 classroom school, conference centre, assembly hall,
playground and swimming pool on the site in Clongriffin.
The
development also includes a small number of apartments and retail units.
It is backed by Gerry Gannon, whose Gannon Developments has funded the
nearby Dart station and a range of public facilities in Clongriffin.
These include an internal street network, a 460-space park-and-ride facility, retail outlets, apartments and houses.
Local
Labour Party TD Seán Kenny told The Irish Times he was not opposing the
development but felt there were a number of issues which needed to be
settled.
He said the inclusion in the plans for “only 192 car
parking spaces is entirely inadequate for a 600 people capacity
conference centre.”
He also said he failed to see why the
application included retail units, including a crèche, bookshop and
library, “when there is a vast amount of empty retail units nearby on
Main Street.”
Mr Kenny said a meeting would be held on Tuesday week between public representatives and planners.
There
was a large mosque in Clonskeagh which blended in well with the
surroundings there.
The new project could also blend in if it was
integrated “with the existing retail, residential, and access footprint
in Clongriffin”.