What would become of the Civic Offices on Wood Quay if the council relocates?
After The Currency reported the idea of the council moving its HQ, councillors were talking about and thinking through the pros and cons and implications.
We can’t kick everybody out of Clontarf and Sandymount. So we’d better have a good plan for how to protect them from flooding, which means more than building a view-blocking wall.
Could this be the first transport plan in decades that just might lead to a genuine improvement in quality of life for Dubliners?
Our advice columnist explains pansexuality to one correspondent, and offers some tips to a gay guy who’s tired of his female housemate walking around naked.
Be prepared for a quarter of St Stephen’s Green to be dug up and turned into a huge hole in the ground.
Advice columnist Roe McDermott takes on the abortion debate, providing you with some material that’s “Perfect for alienating bigoted relatives around the dinner table!”
On North Inner-City development, rising rents and the homelessness crisis, the government is looking out for property interests, rather than the people’s interests.
Even though Ireland has breached EU standards for pollution, when it bought new buses, it bought diesel-powered models, rather than cleaner ones.
Private companies have made millions from direct-provision centres for “old” refugees already in Ireland, and someone’s likely to make huge profits from “new” Syrian refugees too, when they arrive.
Roe McDermott advises a man who’s wondering whether he should tell his evil ex girlfriend that he has an STI, and a woman who doesn’t believe that the man she wants to sleep with is asexual.
Transfixed like a rabbit in headlamps by the fear of being sued for damages, engineers are still applying old thinking – as exemplified by new guardrails near St Stephen’s Green, writes Frank McDonald.
Columnist Roe McDermott answers a question from a woman who wonders whether it’s okay to finish herself off, and another who has a problem with the pill.
The tech boom in Dublin’s docklands has been made possible by a flow of cheap cash from America. But that won’t last forever; interest rates will rise.