Dublin City BID

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    • #710715
      urbanisto
      Participant

      City will be graffiti-free next month, says business group OLIVIA KELLY

      DUBLIN CITY centre will be graffiti free by next month and chewing gum litter free by the end of this year, according to a city businesses organisation.

      The Dublin City Business Improvement District, an organisation funded by businesses to provide additional street cleaning and city “enhancement” services, said its rapid response to graffiti has succeeded in driving graffiti artists out of the city centre.

      Membership of the organisation, known as Bid, is compulsory for every business located in the city core from Parnell Street to St Stephen’s Green and Capel Street to the Custom House. Each business pays and annual fee equivalent to just under 5 per cent of their rates bill. The money is largely used to supplement Dublin City Council services.

      The organisation began removing graffiti from buildings within the Bid zone last November, and, according to its chief executive Richard Guiney, the problem has almost entirely vanished.

      “When we started removing it, the graffiti would come back twice as fast, but there comes a time when they realise that it’s not going to be there for their friends or others to see and they take themselves off.”

      Bid had originally aimed to have made the city centre graffiti free by November, but the project is running two months ahead of schedule, Mr Guiney said.

      “We’ve removed more than 5,000sq m to date. It really has been a great success and it’s when you walk outside of the Bid area that you really become of aware of it.”

      Having defeated the graffiti artists, Bid intends to eliminate chewing gum waste from the city’s pavements. The technology used to remove graffiti can also be used for gum removal. The same chemical is spayed on, but while the graffiti is power-hosed away, the gum is heat-treated or burned off.

      While this does not damage stone, such as granite or concrete pavements, it is a very expensive process. “It costs about €5.50 per square metre to remove chewing gum wads. That works out at about €2.50 to €5 to remove a pack of gum.”

      Bid also carries out additional street washing and vacuuming services to supplement the city council’s regular cleaning service. It also has a team of “street ambassadors” who alert the council if a street needs urgent attention, so that a cleaning crew can be immediately dispatched to the affected area.

      The 18 ambassadors, 12 of whom are employed on a permanent basis, also provide tourist information.

      This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times

      Good to see the BID starting to get active.

      Another thing you may already have noticed on the streets are the maps and street info attached to those ugly telecom cabinets that unfortunately litter the streets. I think this is a great idea! Dublin BID has obviously picked up on the dreadful lack of maps and street info on the capital’s streets and also offered an attractive alternative to the battleship grey, grafitti boxes you see everywhere.

      It doesnt makeup for the lack of proper street furniture proposed under the JC Decaux scheme (but now forgotten) but its certainly worthwhile.

    • #809518
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Yes the boxes (pictures soon) clad in street guidance and historical information offer a nice little refresher course (or let’s face it, introduction for most citizens) to the history of the capital’s streets as one wanders about. The extracts from the Pat Liddy-illustrated map must be very helpful for visitors (he also wrote the texts) as they navigate the city core. As I like to pick holes, as yet I haven’t encountered a single inaccuracy in any of the panels, with which these concepts are often riddled, so top marks on that front, whatever of the rather common typo…

      Saying that, I cannot see these rather delicate coverings lasting or weathering well, especially in bright white. Likewise, it’s a shame that such a noble and very worthwhile project has only been implemented on a budget level, and as part of the Bids process, when quite clearly a project of this kind is the responsibility of the local authority. It should be executed on purpose-designed information panels with authority, graciousness and a civic stamp of approval. Not with garish rolls of adhesive-backed plastic tacked around traffic signal boxes – one of the spin-offs that should have emerged from the JCDecaux debacle.

    • #809519
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      @GrahamH wrote:

      quite clearly a project of this kind is the responsibility of the local authority. It should be executed on purpose-designed information panels with authority, graciousness and a civic stamp of approval. Not with garish rolls of adhesive-backed plastic tacked around traffic signal boxes – one of the spin-offs that should have emerged from the JCDecaux debacle.

      Is it possible to make compulsory purchase orders on JC Decaux billboards? 😉

    • #809520
      admin
      Keymaster

      Moving beyond the Billboard issue it is very good to see the group progressing basic housekeeping issues such as grafitti in their patch. There is a very successful correlation between a BID disctrict and a superior civic district; all too often business rates get directed from local operators straight into the wider City budget without sums being diverted to preserving or improving the specific local environment that created the revenues in the first instance.

      I am peripherally involved with one well established BID district and am involved in an attempt to set up a second at another location; the difference in getting ideas from stakeholder to implementation where a functional bid district exists as against an area where one doesn’t exist is very clear and really displays why BID districts are vital to any district that is serious about putting together a group of stakeholders to ensure that things happen.

      http://www.newwestend.com/

    • #809521
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      some cities attract tourism from graffiti but its the more high end stuff.
      It also ends up being protected and promoted by the city council…

      chewing gum and advertising (oh what they pay rates)…

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