Dublin had suffered severely in the period 1916–1922. It was the scene of a week's heavy street fighting in 1916 and again on the outbreak of the
civil war in 1922. The casualties in Dublin of the revolutionary period from 1916 to 1923 come to about 1,000 dead – 482 killed in the 1916 Easter Rising, another 309 fatal casualties in the 1919–21 War of Independence and finally about 250 killed in the city and county in the Civil War of 1922–23. Many of Dublin's finest buildings were destroyed at this time; the historic General Post Office (GPO) was a bombed out shell after the 1916 Rising;
James Gandon's
Custom House was burned by the
IRA in the War of Independence, while one of Gandon's surviving masterpieces, the
Four Courts had been seized by republicans and bombarded by the pro-treaty army. (Republicans in response senselessly booby-trapped the
Irish Public Records Office, destroying one thousand years of archives). These buildings were later rebuilt. The new state set itself up as best it could. Its
Governor-General was installed in the former
Viceregal Lodge, residence of the British
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, because it was thought to be one of the few places where he was not in danger from republican assassins. Parliament was set up temporarily in the Duke of Leinster's old palace,
Leinster House, where it has remained ever since. Over time, the GPO, Custom House and Four Courts were rebuilt. While major schemes were proposed for Dublin, no major remodelling took place initially.
The "Emergency" Ireland was officially neutral during the
Second World War (see
Irish neutrality during World War II). So much so that it was not even called "the war" in Irish discourse, but "
The Emergency". Although Dublin escaped the mass bombing of the war due to
Ireland's neutrality, the
German air-force bombed Dublin on 31 May 1941, and hit the North Strand – a working-class district in the north inner city – killing 34 Irish civilians and wounding another 90.The bombing was declared accidental, although many suspected that the bombing was deliberate revenge for
de Valera's decision to send fire engines to aid the people of
Belfast following a major bombing in that city. One faction of the IRA hoped to take advantage of the war by getting German help and invading
Northern Ireland. In December 1939, they
successfully stole almost all the
Irish Army's reserve ammunition in a raid on the
Magazine Fort in Dublin's
Phoenix Park. In retaliation, de Valera's government interned IRA members and executed several of them. The war years also saw rationing imposed on Dublin and the temporary enlargement of the small
Jewish community by
Jews who fled there from Nazi persecution.
Tackling the tenements , c. 1913] The first efforts to tackle Dublin's extensive slum areas came on the foundation of the Iveagh Trust in 1891, and the Dublin Artisan Dwellings Company, but these could only help several thousand families. The main focus of the government in 1900–1914 was on building 40,000 cottages for rural workers. Some public planning for the city was made in the first years of the
Irish Free State and then effected after 1932, when
Éamon de Valera came to power. With greater finances available and lower wages due to the
Great Depression, major changes began to take place. A scheme of replacing tenements with decent housing for Dublin's poor began. Some new suburbs, such as
Marino and
Crumlin, were built, but Dublin's inner city slums remained. It was not until the 1960s that substantial progress was made in removing Dublin's tenements, with thousands of Dublin's working-class population being moved to suburban
housing estates around the edge of the city. The success of this project was mixed. Although the tenements were largely removed, such was the urgency of providing new housing that little planning went into their construction. New and growing suburbs like
Tallaght,
Coolock and
Ballymun instantly acquired huge populations, of up to 50,000 people in Tallaght's case, without any provision of shops, public transport or employment. As a result, for several decades, these places became bywords for crime, drug abuse and unemployment. In recent years, such problems have eased somewhat, with the advent of Ireland's so-called '
Celtic Tiger' economic boom. Tallaght in particular has become far more socially mixed and now has very extensive commercial, transport and leisure facilities.
Ballymun Flats, one of the State's few high-rise housing schemes, was largely demolished and re-designed in recent years. Ironically, however, given Ireland's newfound economic prosperity and consequent immigration, there is once again a housing shortage in the city. Increased employment has led to a rapid rise in the city's population. As a result, prices for bought and rented accommodation have risen sharply, leading to many younger Dubliners leaving the city to buy cheaper accommodation in counties
Meath,
Louth,
Kildare and
Wicklow, while still commuting daily to Dublin. This has arguably impacted negatively on the quality of life in the city – leading to severe traffic problems, long commuting times and
urban sprawl.
Destruction of Georgian Dublin in the 1960s As part of the building programme that also cleared the inner city slums, from the 1950s onwards, historic
Georgian Dublin came under concerted attack by the Irish Government's development policies. Whole swathes of 18th-century houses were demolished, notably in Fitzwilliam Street and St Stephen's Green, to make way for utilitarian office blocks and government departments. Much of this development was fuelled by property developers and speculators keen to cash in on the buoyant property markets of the 1960s, late 1970s and 1980s. Many schemes were built by Government supporters with the intention of profitably letting to highly desirable State tenants such as government departments and State agencies. It has been proven that many buildings were approved by government ministers personally connected with the developers involved, often to the detriment of the taxpayer and the proper planning and preservation of Dublin city. Some of this development was also encouraged by Ireland's dominant nationalist ideology of that era, which wanted to wipe away all physical reminders of Ireland's colonial past. An extreme example of this kind of thinking was the destruction of
Nelson's Pillar in
O'Connell Street in 1966. This statue of the famous British admiral was a Dublin landmark for a century, but was blown up by a small bomb shortly before the 50-year commemorations of the
Easter Rising. In 2003, the Pillar was replaced as a landmark by the
Dublin Spire which was erected on the same spot. A 120 m tall tapered metal pole, it is the tallest structure of Dublin city centre, visible for miles. It was assembled from seven pieces with the largest
crane available in Ireland and is the tallest street sculpture in the world. Far from the destructive practices of the 1960s diminishing as time went on, if anything, they got steadily worse, with the concrete office blocks of earlier times being replaced with the idea of Georgian pastiche or replica offices in place of original 18th-century stock. Whole swathes of Harcourt Street and St. Stephen's Green were demolished and rebuilt in such a fashion in the 1970s and 1980s, as were parts of Parnell Square, Kildare Street, North Great George's Street and many other areas around the city. Many saw this practice as an 'easy way out' for planners; a venerable Georgian front was maintained, whilst 'progress' was allowed to continue unhindered. This planning policy was pursued by Dublin Corporation until around 1990, when the forces of conservationism finally took hold. However, it was not only sites associated with the British presence in Ireland that fell victim to Irish developers.
Wood Quay, where the oldest remains of Viking Dublin were located, was also demolished, and replaced with the headquarters of Dublin's local government, though not without a long and acrimonious planning struggle between the government and preservationists. More recently, there has been a similar controversy over plans to build the M50 motorway through the site of
Carrickmines Castle, part of the Pale's southern frontier in medieval times. It has recently been alleged that much controversial building work in Dublin-—over green spaces as well as historic buildings—-was allowed as a result of bribery and patronage of politicians by developers. Since the late 1990s, there have been a series of tribunals set up to investigate corruption in Dublin's planning process.
Northern Troubles Dublin was affected to varying degrees by "
the Troubles" a civil conflict that raged in
Northern Ireland from 1969 to the late 1990s. In 1972, angry crowds in Dublin
burned down the British Embassy in Merrion Square in protest at the shooting of 13 civilians in Derry on
Bloody Sunday (1972) by British troops. The
IRA Southern Command was headquartered in Dublin and was responsible for training camps, recruiting, financing, safe houses, and
weapons procurement in the Republic or overseas to support
IRA Northern Command operations in Northern Ireland (see
Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland). This safe haven in the Republic primarily contributed to the longevity of the conflict. However, the city did not generally experience paramilitary violence directly, with the exception of a period in the early to mid 1970s when it was the target of several
loyalist bombings. The
1972 and 1973 Dublin bombings killed 3 people and injured 185. The worst bomb attacks, however, occurred on Talbot Street in 1974. The
Dublin and Monaghan Bombings on 17 May 1974 were a series of terrorist attacks on
Dublin and
Monaghan in the
Republic of Ireland which left 33 people dead (26 of them in Dublin), and almost 300 injured, the largest number of casualties in any single day in the Troubles. Although no organisation claimed responsibility for the attacks at the time, loyalist paramilitaries from Northern Ireland (in particular the
Ulster Volunteer Force) were widely blamed. In 1993, the Ulster Volunteer Force admitted they carried out the attacks. It has been widely speculated that the bombers were aided by members of the British security forces. In the early 1970s, the Irish government cancelled the hitherto annual Easter parade commemorating the Rising of 1916 and, in 1976, banned it, fearing it was serving as a recruiting tool for illegal republican paramilitaries. Nevertheless, the Provisional republican movement organised a demonstration 10,000 strong on Easter Sunday. However the risks the Provisional IRA posed to the state were highlighted several months later when the organisation assassinated the British Ambassador to Ireland
Christopher Ewart-Biggs near his home at
Sandyford in south Dublin. In 1981, there was considerable solidarity in Dublin with republican paramilitaries who were on hunger strike in Northern prisons. When
Anti H-Block Irish republican protesters, over 15,000 strong, tried to storm the new British Embassy (reconstructed after the events of 1972), there took place several hours of violent rioting with over 1,500
Gardaí, before the protesters were dispersed. Over 200 people were injured, and dozens were arrested. Other, more peaceful demonstrations were held in the 1990s in Dublin, calling for the end of the
Provisional IRA campaign in the North. The largest of these took place in 1993, when up to 20,000 people demonstrated in
O'Connell Street after the IRA killed two children with a bomb in
Warrington in northern England. Similar demonstrations occurred in 1995 and 1996 when the IRA ended its ceasefire, called in 1994, by bombing London and Manchester. On
25 February 2006 rioting broke out between Gardaí and a group of hardline
Irish Republicans protesting the march of a "
Love Ulster", loyalist parade in
O'Connell Street. The small group of political activists were joined by hundreds of local youths, and running battles continued on O'Connell Street for almost three hours, where three shops were looted. The marchers themselves were bused to Kildare Street for a token march past
Dáil Éireann which prompted some 200 or so rioters to move from O'Connell Street to the Nassau Street area, setting cars alight, attacking property, including the headquarters of the
Progressive Democrats, before dispersing.
Regeneration of Dublin , the world's tallest street sculpture Since the 1980s, there has been a greater awareness among Dublin's planners of the need to preserve Dublin's architectural heritage. Preservation orders have been put on most of Dublin's Georgian neighbourhoods. The new awareness was also reflected in the development of
Temple Bar, the last surviving part of Dublin that contained its original medieval street plan. In the 1970s,
Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ), the state transport company, bought up many of the buildings in this area, with a view to building a large modern central bus station on the site with a shopping centre attached. However, most of the buildings had been rented by artists, producing a sudden and unexpected appearance of a 'cultural quarter' that earned comparisons with Paris's
Left Bank. The vibrancy of the Temple Bar area led to demands for its preservation. By the late 1980s, the bus station plans were abandoned, and a master plan was put in place to maintain Temple Bar's position as Dublin's cultural heartland, with large-scale government support. That process has been a mixed success. While the medieval street plan has survived, rents have rocketed, forcing the artists elsewhere. They have been replaced by restaurants and bars, which draw thousands of tourists but which have been criticised for over-commercialisation and excessive alcohol consumption. Also, in the late 1980s, the Grafton and Henry Street areas were pedestrianised. However, the real transformation of Dublin has occurred since the late 1990s, when the so-called '
Celtic Tiger' economic boom took effect. The city, previously full of derelict sites, has seen a building boom – especially the construction of new office blocks and apartments. The most visually spectacular of these developments is the
International Financial Services Centre (IFSC)- a financial district almost a kilometre long situated along the north quays. While the former tramways had been torn up in the 1950s in favour of buses, the new
Luas tram service started in 2004. Though slow to develop,
Dublin Airport had become the
16th busiest international airport by 2007.
Heroin problem In the late 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, Dublin suffered a serious wave of drug addiction and associated crime throughout its working-class areas. The introduction of the drug heroin into the inner city in the late 1970s accentuated social problems associated with unemployment, poor housing and poverty. These problems were twofold. Firstly, heroin addiction caused a wave of petty crime such as muggings, robbery and so forth as addicts tried to secure money for their next "fix". This made many of the affected areas all but uninhabitable for the rest of the population. In addition, many addicts ultimately died from diseases such as AIDS and
hepatitis caused by sharing needles. Secondly, the drug trade saw the establishment of serious organised crime syndicates in the city, whose use of violence led to many murders being committed. The most notorious of these killings was that of the journalist
Veronica Guerin in 1996, who was killed by criminals she was investigating for a Sunday newspaper. The drug problem led to a widespread anti-drugs movement, the most well-known group was the Concerned Parents Against Drugs, which peaked in the mid-1990s, whose members tried to force drug dealers out of their neighbourhoods. The anti-drugs campaigners were accused of being
vigilantes, or a front for
Sinn Féin and the
Provisional IRA, although this allegation has been vigorously disputed. ==Twenty First Century==