THE Floozy in the Jacuzzi is to be relocated alongside the River Liffey.
The Anna Livia statue and fountain, famed for showing her wares in the middle of O'Connell Street, has spent the last four years in a crate in a council depot in Raheny.
Dublin City Council revealed it has found a new home for it in the Croppy Memorial Gardens facing Collins Barracks. The Croppy Acre, as it's known locally, forms a burial ground for the fallen of the 1798 Rebellion.
A spokesman for the council confirmed the move would take place soon.
"It will be re-erected some time in the near future but there's no definite date for it as yet," he said. Anna Livia was erected in O'Connell Street in 1988.
The IR£200,000 sculpture was sponsored by the Smurfit family.
Designed by Eamonn O'Doherty, it was named after Anna Livia Plurabelle - a character in James Joyce's 'Finnegan's Wake'.
Unfortunately, litter and graffiti became a hallmark of the statue while drunken jokers got endless fun dumping washing up liquid into the fountain at weekends, covering the street in froth and foam.
The original site of the Anna Livia fountain is now home to one of the world's tallest sculptures.
Rising to 120m the Spire of Dublin was designed to be seen right across the capital city
THE Floozy in the Jacuzzi is to be relocated alongside the River Liffey.
The Anna Livia statue and fountain, famed for showing her wares in the middle of O'Connell Street, has spent the last four years in a crate in a council depot in Raheny.
Dublin City Council revealed it has found a new home for it in the Croppy Memorial Gardens facing Collins Barracks. The Croppy Acre, as it's known locally, forms a burial ground for the fallen of the 1798 Rebellion.
A spokesman for the council confirmed the move would take place soon.
"It will be re-erected some time in the near future but there's no definite date for it as yet," he said. Anna Livia was erected in O'Connell Street in 1988.
The IR£200,000 sculpture was sponsored by the Smurfit family.
Designed by Eamonn O'Doherty, it was named after Anna Livia Plurabelle - a character in James Joyce's 'Finnegan's Wake'.
Unfortunately, litter and graffiti became a hallmark of the statue while drunken jokers got endless fun dumping washing up liquid into the fountain at weekends, covering the street in froth and foam.
The original site of the Anna Livia fountain is now home to one of the world's tallest sculptures.
Rising to 120m the Spire of Dublin was designed to be seen right across the capital city