Parallel to the recent rise in interest in public spaces, the proliferation of alluring, distinctive and exclusive public spaces in many post-industrial cities raises the question of how far these environments are truly public. This paper discusses the question of the publicness of contemporary public spaces in Britain, where they have been placed at the top of the political agenda of the Labour Governments since the late-1990s. Studying in depth the changing publicness of the Grey's Monument Area (GMA), a public space recently refurbished in the city centre of Newcastle upon Tyne, regarding the dimensions of access, actor and interest, the paper seeks to show that, contrary to the wide recognition of diminishing publicness of...