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Jervis Shopping Centre

Mid-size shopping centre in central Dublin, Ireland


Summary

Mid-size shopping centre in central Dublin, Ireland

FieldValue
nameJervis Shopping Centre
imagejerviscentre.JPG
captionAtrium
locationDublin, Ireland
coordinates
opening_date
architectJames Toomey architects
number_of_stores90
number_of_anchors4
floor_area35766 m2
parking750
floors3
website

The Jervis Shopping Centre is a major shopping centre in Dublin, Ireland. Opened in 1996, the centre is located in the area bordered by Jervis Street, Upper Abbey Street, Mary Street, and Liffey Street. The centre has more than 90 retail units including clothing, food and electrical outlets.

History

The centre was built on a 12,000 m2 (3-acre) former hospital site, which was bought in 1994 at a cost of £5.97 million. The centre was built at a cost of £76 million. Most of the facade of the former Hospital was retained and incorporated into the Shopping Centre. The centre opened in 1996 and extends to more than 35,766 m2. The centre was originally anchored by Debenhams, Marks & Spencer and Quinnsworth, and contains a 750-space car park. The property is located on Mary Street, one of Ireland's busiest streets.

Although its main entrance is on Mary Street, the centre is named for the Jervis Street Hospital on whose site it was built following the hospital's closure in the late-1980s. The existing Marks and Spencer shop on Mary Street was incorporated into the new centre, with the other anchor tenants being Quinnsworth (now Tesco) in the unit formerly occupied by Debenhams.

The centre is notable in that, as the first major shopping centre opened during the economic boom of the late-1990s, it marked the first appearance of many British retailers on main streets in Ireland. These included: Boots, Dixons, Debenhams, Next, and Argos among others, some of which have gone on to become major names in Ireland. This contrasted with existing Irish shopping centres at the time which were usually anchored by Irish retailers such as Dunnes, Roches Stores (since taken over by Debenhams), and Penneys. Not all of the new arrivals were successful. British Home Stores opened a shop in 1996 having previously sold all of their Irish interests to Penneys; however, the outlet was not a success and was later sold to Heatons.

The centre was one of the first to introduce the food court concept to Ireland, with outlets including: KFC, Spud U Like, and Harry Ramsden's. Other major restaurants in the centre include Burger King. The centre is owned by Paddy McKillen, Padraig Drayne and Paschal Taggart. In March 2025, it was reported that the centre was to be offered for sale for €120 million with Frasers Group and Starwood Capital Group interested in the centre.

Public transport

The shopping centre is on the Luas Red line, with the Jervis Luas stop right outside the building.

Notes

References

  1. "Investors await green light for €100m project".
  2. https://www.irishtimes.com/property/commercial-property/2025/03/05/dublins-jervis-shopping-centre-to-be-put-up-for-sale-with-120m-price-tag/
  3. (February 7, 2007). "Jervis centre rents may rise by up to 100%". The Irish Times.
  4. https://www.irishtimes.com/property/commercial-property/2025/03/05/dublins-jervis-shopping-centre-to-be-put-up-for-sale-with-120m-price-tag/
  5. "Savills Ireland {{!}} Jervis Shopping Centre".
  6. "Massive tax write-off for Jervis trio - Independent.ie".
  7. https://www.irishtimes.com/property/commercial-property/2025/03/05/dublins-jervis-shopping-centre-to-be-put-up-for-sale-with-120m-price-tag/
  8. Daly, Linda. (2025-07-19). "Mike Ashley and Starwood battle for Jervis Shopping Centre".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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