Vacancy Watch: a big site near Fatima Luas stop
Even as the government casts around for new land to zone for homes, it is unclear when this plot will be built out.
The building, which has literary connections and a prominent location in the village, is falling apart. It’s not clear what the owner’s plans are for it.
Near Christ Church, artist Ross Carvill made a cafe’s window look all “warm and fuzzy”. In Lucan, artist Louise Butler brightened a family’s home with Pikachu and snowflakes.
Killian Boland, deputy principal of St Enda’s Primary School, says he’s been told his school is not forgotten. “We’re just somewhere on a list at the moment.”
What once was Meet Me in the Morning, on Pleasants Street, has become Table Wine (which offers food too).
Martha Fitzgerald says she was inspired by the 1987 film The Witches of Eastwick to write a spooky, magical musical about three women, set in Dublin – The Witches of East Wall.
These were some of the issues Dublin city councillors discussed at a recent meeting of their South Central Area Committee.
Business owners and councillors agree it’s a challenge – some suggest adding loading bays, others, experimenting more with delivery hubs.
To make it easier to get around the city without catching the virus, it had cut waiting times for walkers. In August, it increased them again.
It could be an area bounded by Harcourt Street, Wexford Street, Camden Street and Cuffe Street in Dublin 2, says the organisation’s general secretary.
Organising votes, only for them to be rejected all the time, is a waste of resources, said the council’s parking enforcement officer at a recent meeting.
While a councillor has raised the idea, when students and parents have been surveyed on how best to ease congestion, school buses haven’t always come out on top.
“We just want to bring everyone together,” says Tadhg Kinsella, who founded the collective, which has so far put on about ten events.