Opening of Dockland Campus Exhibitions - Governor Philip R. Lane
27 April 2017
Speech
I am
delighted that you could join us this evening to celebrate the opening of our visitor
centre with two exciting and complementary exhibitions: the Euro Exhibition and Pounds, Shillings and Independence.
I am
particularly delighted that Stephanie Van Delft of the Communications Directorate
at the European Central Bank is here with us this evening. Stephanie, along
with Director General Communications, Christine Graeff, Deputy Director Communications,
Thierry Bracke and Director Banknotes, Ton Roos was instrumental in sharing the
Euro Exhibition with us.
But why a visitor
space in a Central Bank, you may ask?
There is a
simple answer to that question: we want people to understand what we do and why
we do it, in order to facilitate greater transparency and understanding of our
public service role.
Central
banks across the world moved to the front pages of the newspapers in 2008 and
have largely stayed there ever since.
In that
time, there has been extensive debate about monetary policy, financial
stability policy and many other aspects of central banking that were previously
considered arcane knowledge.
But while
the effects of ECB or Federal Reserve or national central bank decisions are widely
reported upon and communicated, there is less focus on the motivation for those
decisions.
The
Central Bank of Ireland’s mandate is very clear: safeguarding stability,
protecting consumers.
Every
decision we take is in the public interest – albeit some of those actions may
not be universally popular!
Explaining
the rationale for those evidence-based decisions is important to us.
While
Central Bank independence is enshrined in the institutional and legislative
framework of the European Union, as well as domestic law, the flipside of that
independence is accountability.
And as a
public institution, we take our obligations to be fully accountable for our
actions very seriously.
Communications
and accountability are therefore key components of our Strategic Plan
2016-2018.
We
demonstrate that accountability in several ways: our Annual Report and Annual
Performance Statement will be published next week; we engage with Oireachtas
Committees; we publish minutes of our Commission meetings; we disclose operational
information on our website; and we explain our policies through a series of
public speaking events and topical publications.
The
visitor space is another important element of that accountability.
We share
this vision with Dublin City Council, which requires that landmark public
buildings should have publicly-accessible spaces. In this way and through our
ongoing work of our outreach and community programmes, we demonstrate our
commitment to the sustainable development of the Docklands area and the broader
national community.
The
visitor space is truly a new departure for the Bank. In this space, we will
meet with the public, hear their views, tell them about what we do and why we
do it. Our visitors will range from the local community here in North Wall quay
to citizens across the country, from schoolchildren on tours to civic groups
and everyone in between. This will be a living evolving space with a dedicated
curatorial policy to ensure rotating themes and exhibitions that will always
seek to be interesting and informative.
In tandem
with this, our new archive on this floor will collect, preserve, promote and
make accessible records charting the history of the Bank and its contribution
to the development of Ireland.
We are
opening the visitor space by jointly hosting two exciting and complementary
exhibitions.
The first
is the Euro Exhibition, which was created by the European Central Bank and has
toured our colleague Eurosystem central banks (national central banks of
countries which use the Euro).
This an
interactive exhibition which examines the development of euro currency and
includes sections on euro banknotes and their security features, euro coinage
and the history of money.
To bring a
uniquely Irish focus, we have created another exhibition which celebrates the
90th anniversary of the Currency Commission, the forerunner to the current
Central Bank.
The
exhibition tells the story of the development of Ireland’s currency following
our emergence as an independent state. To note just one highlight from the
exhibition, it features the work of the committee (chaired by WB Yeats) that
was appointed to select designs for the new coinage. In addition to the well-known winning
designs, the exhibition also includes fascinating 3-D prints of other
submissions from a range of international competitors.
There are,
of course, too many individuals to thank for their hard work in bringing the
Visitor Space and the opening exhibitions to fruition.
But I
would like to especially mention Pounds,
Shillings and Independence curator Padraig Clancy and designer Tom Meenaghan;
production company Alphaset; Laura McNicolas and Anne-Marie Hourihane of 925 Productions
who provided the documentary film – Mr
Yeats and the Beastly Coins; translator Séamus Ó Coileáin; photographer Ruth Carden; and all those who contributed
to the exhibition, including our staff member who led this work, Ciara Lawler.
I’d also
like to thank the architects from Henry J. Lyons, who designed the space,
Dublin City Council, our Archivist, Ross Higgins, and many teams across the
Bank including Facilities Management, Fusion, Security and Porters.
To
conclude, I hope you enjoy this event and that you will return to visit us with
your friends and families.