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Most depressing Dunnes in Ireland?

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,090 ✭✭✭jill_valentine


    upstairs in the ilac creeps me out cause its closed and dark

    When that centre is closed, let me tell you, the whole place is pure Dawn of the Dead.

    Somehow the chapel makes it even creepier. :(


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 592 ✭✭✭kieranfitz


    Dungarvan, Co. Waterford.
    Most depressing Dunnes in Ireland?

    The one I work in!

    Snap
    Working there was hell. You were treated like crap and managers would take any opportunity to berate you. Now the junior/trainee managers were fine, it was the ones who ran the departments and overall store who were the issue.

    I worked from 2 pm December 23rd to well after 2am December 24th and was supposed to be back in at 8am. The manager who was with us told me that I was entitled to a certain length of time between shifts and not to come in at 8am. Instead I was to start at 12. I got in at 11 thinking that i was doing them a fabor but was instantly sent to the head manager who spent 5minutes screaming at me for not being there at 8.

    Thinking back I can't name one girl I worked with who wasn't reduced to tears at least once and I know one of the trainee managers had a break down over the way she was treated. She told me that from the start of the day till the end it was nothing but constant abuse and that no matter how good the job was done fault would be found.

    A few friends have worked in Tesco and they really can't say a bad word about the place. The managers treat them with respect and they are allowed to be themselves to a degree.

    On my second day in Dunnes, I was given a warning due to my piercings and hair cut. When I was hired I had my mohawk and piercings on display in the interview and not a single word was said about them to me. I wore the Mohawk down in work and on the first day all was good, wasn't till the second day that it was an issue, a manager said I looked like a good for nothing punk. In Tesco my friend has wore his piercings and hair bleached a dozen colours over the years and not once has a manager said anything about it.


    So it's not just mine then, nearly 7 years (could have done less for manslaughter). No natural light on the grocery side and very little in drapery. The store manager actually discourages people from coming in, I've had customers call me to see if he was working just so they could avoid him, so imagine what its like for staff. Personnel managers are without fail incompetent, even for their chosen profession. I myself finish every night, well technically morning, worried about the bolliking I'm going to walk into the next day owing the things I didn't get done because we don't have the time and/or people to get the work done.


  • Site Banned Posts: 5,676 ✭✭✭jayteecork


    Used be Ballyvolane in Cork but that has improved.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,395 ✭✭✭✭mikemac1


    Ah few will know it but Dunnes in Nenagh
    Everyone said it was the smallest Dunnes in Ireland, I don't know if that's true or not

    For some bizarre reason the food section was downstairs and the clothes was on the ground floor :confused:

    There was no lift or escalater, you'd met people struggling up the steep stairs with a load of shopping
    What fool designed the store that way

    Over a decade ago the food section closed and the entire shop shut down a few years later leaving a great dirty vacant premises on the main street of the town

    Nenagh is dying and depressing and the busiest shops are circled outside it
    I don't like this planning at all


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 850 ✭✭✭ordinary_girl


    100% the Dunnes in Crumlin Shopping Centre. It's rare for me to walk into a shop and suddenly feel depressed. The several different Dunnes' in Crumlin aren't great for a start, but even all the vacant shops around it. So grim.

    The upstairs of the Dunnes in the Ilac creeps me out, always dark with the escalators closed. It looks like the shop is only half alive or something.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,033 ✭✭✭✭Richard Hillman


    Dunnes in Dun Laoghaire is pretty dire. The place is always empty and is in a ghost town. The outside is the exact same as it was as when i was a kid.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,806 ✭✭✭✭KeithM89_old


    One of the 3 here in Dundalk is awful, put some wire fences up at it could pass for a prison.

    http://g.co/maps/6w8mq


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,090 ✭✭✭jill_valentine


    KeithM89 wrote: »
    One of the 3 here in Dundalk is awful, put some wire fences up at it could pass for a prison.

    http://g.co/maps/6w8mq

    Jesus, it looks like The Maze.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,806 ✭✭✭✭KeithM89_old


    It seriously looks like The Maze or something, yeah.

    Even worse inside. Hell hole.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 35,514 ✭✭✭✭efb


    Are there nice Dunnesezzez anywhere?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,194 ✭✭✭saa


    I get nostalgic over the grotty beige and manky green look, with those weird recycled plastic tiles they have.
    It's like the way the Ilac centre used to be with the big green clover.
    But I can see how that would be depressing, I used to like Dunnes when I bought white bread, biscuits, pasta, meat and cheap crisps (good ol St.Bernard to the rescue) but now I don't its tedious shopping there because all the food is more expensive or aimed to suit the pallet of a cake loving mammy, not like the other places are better.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,195 ✭✭✭Corruptedmorals


    efb wrote: »
    Are there nice Dunnesezzez anywhere?

    The deliberately snazzy flagships are- Henry street, cornelscourt and liffey valley. Newer doesn't mean better though, dunnes maynooth is only 5 years old and looks far older, same grimness that much older ones have.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,625 ✭✭✭How so Joe


    The deliberately snazzy flagships are- Henry street, cornelscourt and liffey valley. Newer doesn't mean better though, dunnes maynooth is only 5 years old and looks far older, same grimness that much older ones have.

    It's 6! And that's not entirely Dunnes' fault. Whoever designed the centre (and the apartments above it) made some huge cockups. There's forever bits of the ceiling falling down, both in Dunnes and the rest of Manor Mills. :rolleyes:

    Although, considering Dunnes is the flagship in the centre, it's entirely possible they had a hand in designing the centre. Hrmmm...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15,515 ✭✭✭✭admiralofthefleet


    the one in bridgewater in arklow is nice, but i dont shop in dunnes. i wouldnt support that margeret heffernan geebag


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15,515 ✭✭✭✭admiralofthefleet


    When that centre is closed, let me tell you, the whole place is pure Dawn of the Dead.

    Somehow the chapel makes it even creepier. :(

    ive been in loads of times when its closed, especially before it was done up when i worked in roches. eerie place altogether


  • Site Banned Posts: 2,037 ✭✭✭paddyandy


    Our Thoroughfares are draped like Hoors in a red light district .


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 440 ✭✭nicechick!


    If you worked in one for a few weeks you wouldn't wonder why the staff aren't happy! They are notorious as an employer for a very good reason. They only care about having stock on the floor and selling it, seriously customer service is not stressed at any point. It's up to the individual. I for one worked in two Dunnes for nearly 4 years and was always able to be pleasant. But I'm well able to see why others aren't doing this. There's no motivation, the only thing that gets you through the day is the people you work with, everything else is fairly soul destroying. Customers treat staff and stock like crap also, which isn't going to raise staff morale. The drapery sections are treated just like Penneys is, except with way less staff to cope with it. All stores are understaffed big time.

    Dunnes has a huge amount of staff who have been there 10+ years. Customer service actively declines the longer the staff are there.

    Tragic really is, I don't doubt what your saying and would agree that the lack of customer service is primarily driven by poor people management.

    Generally across the Retail Sector the norm is understaffed resulting in added responsibility, bigger workload but still can maintain a consistent standards & level of customer service again primarily driven by management though I fully acknowledge that most people are genuinely pleasant like yourself and willing would like to make any one's experience a good one. I understand that you may also get the poor negative experience from customers however most people are more open to a smile or acknowledgement and less likely to take there foul humor out on others. Its the nature of the job you may not always meet pleasant people.

    I think this is why I'd avoid them though it may be little I rather spend my money elsewhere for this reason. Dunness in my view based purely on the level of customer service is driven from the top down that it is a company in my view that does recognize the value there employees who contribute daily to the delivery of there bottom line figures. I have tried to google Dunnes looking for information regarding there company mission, values and shockingly can't find anything! Again suggests they take little pride in there employees. I found one article from a couple of years ago and it states they had approx 18000 people working for them! I believe they have Hr Managers taking care of the HR within there stores but to me the primary driver in there role is more like ''policing'' I couldn't find any reference to people engagement, motivation, training or development more like a role for maintaining policy, procedure, compliance measures which of course are important!

    You had a lucky escape :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,644 ✭✭✭✭lazygal


    Donaghmede is pretty woeful.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 356 ✭✭Bobsammy


    How so Joe wrote: »
    It's 6! And that's not entirely Dunnes' fault. Whoever designed the centre (and the apartments above it) made some huge cockups. There's forever bits of the ceiling falling down, both in Dunnes and the rest of Manor Mills. :rolleyes:

    Although, considering Dunnes is the flagship in the centre, it's entirely possible they had a hand in designing the centre. Hrmmm...

    It's 7 actually! Opened in 2005.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 866 ✭✭✭Palytoxin


    Old one in Portlaoise, by a long way. The new one is actually nice enough though!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,555 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    Jaysus the memories are coming back I used to deliver to all there stores around Ireland from memory these had to be some of the worst.
    Wine st Sligo
    Ballina
    West port
    Letterkenny(the old one)
    Dundalk x2 not the newish one
    North side shopping center
    Cardiffsbridge Finglas(the wild west with the barriers and barbed wire it was like something out of mad max:eek:)
    Tralee x 3
    Arklow old one
    Nenagh old one
    Ballyvolane
    Main street Cork
    Dunnes westside Galway
    Portlaise old one
    Clomel x 3 although I heard they updated the one on the way out of the town
    Ennis
    There is probely more that I can't think off but have to say at least there deli counter was always better than tesco,And I am so glad that I no longer deliver to them some of the mgmt are absolute pr**ks, during the time that we had snow some years ago I had a manager give out to me that I was late.
    I asked the knob were they late getting into work when they replied yes I answered back that they expected me to travel accross the other side of the country and be on time with the dodgy roads(black ice etc) with a 45 foot trailer behind me.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 37,214 ✭✭✭✭Dudess


    If you remember the 80s they were all depressing back then but many have been given a facelift, except (in my experience):

    - Talbot Street, Dublin city centre
    - The "old" Dunnes in Bishopstown, Cork (ffs - close the monstrosity already, there's a lovely new one down the road!)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,917 ✭✭✭✭iguana


    Dudess wrote: »
    - The "old" Dunnes in Bishopstown, Cork (ffs - close the monstrosity already, there's a lovely new one down the road!)

    They don't like closing old ones even when they have opened a new premises nearby as they are worried about competitors moving into the empty unit.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,555 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    iguana wrote: »
    They don't like closing old ones even when they have opened a new premises nearby as they are worried about competitors moving into the empty unit.

    They closed the old ones in Longford and Roscrea and just left them there to rot spot on about letting the competition in.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 37,214 ✭✭✭✭Dudess


    Ballyvolane Dunnes is grand now IMO - but pre 1990s, a pit of despair...


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 44 fatfacee


    Crumlin shopping centre. It's like walking into a different time zone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 349 ✭✭RH149


    Bray-....the food one near the Dart Station......horrendous!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,780 ✭✭✭alie


    I remember all the scares in crumlin.in the 80,s , everyone evacuated on a daily basis.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,674 ✭✭✭Dangerous Man


    I remember one of those scares in Crumlin too; people were running out of Dunnes without paying for their shopping.

    Anyway, the Dunnes in Crumlin is just the pits. Seperate offie, seperate frozen section and seperate dry goods. Grotesque, unbelievable, bizarre, unprecedented.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,195 ✭✭✭Corruptedmorals


    How so Joe wrote: »
    It's 6! And that's not entirely Dunnes' fault. Whoever designed the centre (and the apartments above it) made some huge cockups. There's forever bits of the ceiling falling down, both in Dunnes and the rest of Manor Mills. :rolleyes:

    Although, considering Dunnes is the flagship in the centre, it's entirely possible they had a hand in designing the centre. Hrmmm...

    Seems like only yesterday getting leaflets in the door advertising its opening..!!

    Nothing wrong about Manor Mills itself, (looks wise! As you say, there is design flaws) just that the Dunnes is designed exactly like a different one I worked in (I worked in both) and there is 20 years between their opening dates! But it's not an 'A store' so will never be seen as important to jazz up.

    It's the anchor and backbone of every crappy shopping centre in Ireland. They must be miffed when they're one of many, like Liffey Valley.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,661 ✭✭✭✭retalivity


    iguana wrote: »
    They don't like closing old ones even when they have opened a new premises nearby as they are worried about competitors moving into the empty unit.

    Add Letterkenny to that list too


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,078 ✭✭✭✭LordSutch


    I find the tone of their in-store announcements depressing, same in Woodies.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,709 ✭✭✭✭Cantona's Collars


    The old one in Enniscorthy was a complete kip,held together by packing tape & dirt.I worked there for a short while years ago,most of the managers were actually pretty sound until one asshole who was only a year or so older than me arrived.He managed to fall out with every member of staff within a couple of weeks.I threatened to throw him down the stairs one night after a particular episode of cuntishness from him.
    The next day I expected a P45 but the head man told me he'd gotten several complaints about yer man and he was being transferred,never seen so many happy staff in one place when they got the news.

    The old store is closed now & of course Dunnes won't let anyone take it over and it remains empty and detracts from the town.:(


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,748 ✭✭✭Dermighty


    The Dunnes that used to be on the main street in Mallow. A long narrow cave, in which the drapery section was between the front door and the checkouts. It really was all the series of Lost in a shop :P
    RayM wrote: »
    Dunnes Stores in Portlaoise is particularly grim.

    I've a feeling that green van is packed with bags of fertiliser and detonators :P


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,625 ✭✭✭How so Joe


    Bobsammy wrote: »
    It's 7 actually! Opened in 2005.
    It's not 7 til October. or September. Can't remember.
    It's still horrible. =(


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,456 ✭✭✭✭Mr Benevolent


    All Dunnes seem dingy, cluttered and badly lit. Even Lidl and Aldi have more space.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,151 ✭✭✭Ben D Bus


    Portadown. Grim.

    As is Dunnes in Portadown.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 221 ✭✭Kitty-kitty


    nicechick! wrote: »
    Dunness in my view based purely on the level of customer service is driven from the top down that it is a company in my view that does recognize the value there employees who contribute daily to the delivery of there bottom line figures. I have tried to google Dunnes looking for information regarding there company mission, values and shockingly can't find anything! Again suggests they take little pride in there employees. I found one article from a couple of years ago and it states they had approx 18000 people working for them! I believe they have Hr Managers taking care of the HR within there stores but to me the primary driver in there role is more like ''policing'' I couldn't find any reference to people engagement, motivation, training or development more like a role for maintaining policy, procedure, compliance measures which of course are important!

    You had a lucky escape :)

    While working in Dunnes I never met one person who actually enjoyed working there. There was no incentive to. The managers were constantly stressed, HR were people you only saw when you'd done something wrong (the HR office would open 9-5 Monday to Friday so if you worked evenings and weekends, as many students there did, you never saw HR) New rules would be enstated at random, only told to some people, not to others and managers were nearly always unaware of checkout rules (occasionally telling you in front of customers to break a rule the checkout's computer wouldn't let you do) Also despite having good workers who enjoyed being there, they had a habit while I was working there of taking people on for six months, not renewing their contracts... then hiring on other people, because it was cheaper than an eventual raise.

    ANYWAY I DIVERGE. I think Stephen's Green Dunnes is nice. There are two Dunneses in the Ilac Centre, one which opens out onto Henry St and is nice and new...

    ... and another which sells the same clothes a one minute walk across the centre but is old and miserable...

    The old Dunnes in Mullingar before it closed down was tragic.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,472 ✭✭✭highlydebased


    All of them. Absolutely despise their shops.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,750 ✭✭✭ghostchant


    The Dunnes that was on Northumberland Ave. in Dun Laoghaire, around the corner from the main one. Most depressing shop I've ever been in full stop. Apparently was built on the site of an old graveyard/church. Sounds about right.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,785 ✭✭✭Aglomerado


    All of them. Absolutely despise their shops.

    And me! I really hate them. Especially the one in Ennis. Yes, EVEN if Father Ted Christmas Special was filmed there.

    I always hated the one on Sarsfield Street in Limerick as well. Grotty place with rotten floor tiles.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 853 ✭✭✭toexpress


    I remember years ago when we were kids my mother always shopped in Quinnsworth in Naas, my Aunt went to Dunnes in Newbridge. Now Quinnsworth was pretty crappy (remember yellow pack? cept for the Shepards Pie they did that was tasty) anyway I always thought that Dunnes was worse than Quinnsworth. Then in the boom times I was over here for a weekend went in with my sister and thought how far it had come. Then when I moved home I went to shop I went to shop there it was awful all the nice deli stuff and bakery stuff was gone to be replaced with a horrible air of recession. (Also there was some mess about having to have a pin number and be in a book to pay a bill by cheque and something else to do with Transax which all sounded dreadfully complex and we seemed to lack any sort of customer service)

    So that's Dunnes in Newbridge getting my vote!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 403 ✭✭Mensch Maschine


    It's got to be the one of North Earl St beside the Spire. All the winos, junkies, knackers, thugs frequent it. The off-licence part is worse. It's so depressing.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,482 ✭✭✭✭Ush1


    That sounds more like you've described Lidl.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 853 ✭✭✭toexpress


    It's got to be the one of North Earl St beside the Spire. All the winos, junkies, knackers, thugs frequent it. The off-licence part is worse. It's so depressing.

    Yes I suppose Dunnes does provide a place for these people to go ...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 592 ✭✭✭kieranfitz


    Jaysus the memories are coming back I used to deliver to all there stores around Ireland from memory these had to be some of the worst.
    Wine st Sligo
    Ballina
    West port
    Letterkenny(the old one)
    Dundalk x2 not the newish one
    North side shopping center
    Cardiffsbridge Finglas(the wild west with the barriers and barbed wire it was like something out of mad max:eek:)
    Tralee x 3
    Arklow old one
    Nenagh old one
    Ballyvolane
    Main street Cork
    Dunnes westside Galway
    Portlaise old one
    Clomel x 3 although I heard they updated the one on the way out of the town
    Ennis
    There is probely more that I can't think off but have to say at least there deli counter was always better than tesco,And I am so glad that I no longer deliver to them some of the mgmt are absolute pr**ks, during the time that we had snow some years ago I had a manager give out to me that I was late.
    I asked the knob were they late getting into work when they replied yes I answered back that they expected me to travel accross the other side of the country and be on time with the dodgy roads(black ice etc) with a 45 foot trailer behind me.

    We were all pulled aside in groups during the bad weather those two years and told, whatever happened , to make sure we were in on time.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,555 ✭✭✭donkey balls


    kieranfitz wrote: »
    We were all pulled aside in groups during the bad weather those two years and told, whatever happened , to make sure we were in on time.


    Jaysus some employers don't give a flying fook about their staff I ended up working for another retail chain, and the mgmt told us during the crappy weather if its to dangerous to drive pull in let the office and store know that your gonna be late.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,138 ✭✭✭paky


    i agree with you op, all dunnes stores have a grim gloomy feel about them. its probably the ridiculous prices they charge for some stuff that gives them that feel. the staff are miserable as fcuk and contemptuous of customers. totally agree with the supervisors, you'd swear they were on a catwalk strutting their stuff. dopes in a need of a good hiding


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,644 ✭✭✭cml387


    Dunnes in Kilkenny's McDonagh center is pretty grim.
    Since Dunnes already had an aircraft hangar sized store at the other end of town,one might wonder why they had to open there as well.
    One might surmise it was to keep Tesco out.

    Since Clonmel has been mentioned, we must be unique in a town this sized to have three, two of which have been recently revamped.

    But the economics of Dunnes Stores as a whole is extremely puzzling.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23 bettyl


    Dunnes in Longford is a nice enough shop.


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