Solomon Pleasant wrote: » I am from an innately rural area, a place with all of the hallmarks of a rural setting. I also attend university in Dublin and live there for most of the year. Personally, I think that there is only one winner in the majority of comparable attributes - city life. Public transport, health services, social outlets, educational facilities, employment opportunities and general infrastructure are vastly superior in Dublin, or any heavily urbanised area, than a more rural region of Ireland. Opportunities are, generally, much more accessible in somewhere like Dublin or Cork than the back end of nowhere. I don't have a car and it's incredibly limiting in terms of what I can actually do because bus services (we have no train) are horrific. Unemployment is rife and so is the lack of essential amenities. Sure, housing is more expensive in urban regions, but why shouldn't it be? You are paying for a much better quality of living and competing with others to attain this standard of living. That being said, I view the current housing market within the GDA as borderline extortionate, but alas what can we do? Decades of poor political planning have pushed us that point.Ultimately, the goal of the government is to pretty much eradicate rural Ireland. Forcing masses of people to live within a geographically small area is the most economical way for society to function. Rural Ireland's heyday has come and gone, it's simply taking it's time to dwindle down.
Dirty Dingus McGee wrote: » You can get over 90,000 into Croke Park if we let people onto the pitch. That's Westmeath cleared out and the massive burden it's putting on the country over with straight away and with a few thousand of them having to live on the pitch it'll give them a chance of beating Dublin in the championship.
Mutant z wrote: » I live in the countryside about 15 miles away from the nearest city so it isnt a huge distance away, and while i do like the countryside, sometimes i do wonder if it would be a lot simpler if i lived in the city, all the basic facilities seem to be there, you have a decent transport system compared to what you have in the countryside especially if you don't drive like myself and have to rely on either someone else to drive you or an infrequent bus service if you need to head into town, because the things you want to buy arn't available locally, likewise if you have a job or are going for an interview these are usually city based, and if you live in the country this can be an inconvenience when travelling to get there on time, which isn't as big an issue in a city, although you could argue that the relative peace and quiet of the countryside, is preferable to the hustle and bustle of city life, and indeed you have more interaction within the community, which you don't really get in a city, where everyone feels like a stranger even your own neighbours, what do you think is the better place to live in, the countryside or the city.
Yourself isit wrote: » I'd go with both.
SEPT 23 1989 wrote: » A village beside the sea in Dublin is what you want
Atlantic Dawn wrote: » If I had good broadband I'd be happy enough on a 1 bed apartment on Rockall.
mariaalice wrote: » surly its a slightly silly question, people have their preference and that it and a lot of it is down to personality people are either more suited to city or country life.
myshirt wrote: » This bull**** of one off housing needs to stop. We can't afford it and people are dying needlessly over it.
Rabbo wrote: » How are people dying because of one-off housing? Poor health and safety measures on small sites?
Solomon Pleasant wrote: » I am from an innately rural area, a place with all of the hallmarks of a rural setting. I also attend university in Dublin and live there for most of the year. Personally, I think that there is only one winner in the majority of comparable attributes - city life. Public transport, health services, social outlets, educational facilities, employment opportunities and general infrastructure are vastly superior in Dublin, or any heavily urbanised area, than a more rural region of Ireland. Opportunities are, generally, much more accessible in somewhere like Dublin or Cork than the back end of nowhere. I don't have a car and it's incredibly limiting in terms of what I can actually do because bus services (we have no train) are horrific. Unemployment is rife and so is the lack of essential amenities. Sure, housing is more expensive in urban regions, but why shouldn't it be? You are paying for a much better quality of living and competing with others to attain this standard of living. That being said, I view the current housing market within the GDA as borderline extortionate, but alas what can we do? Decades of poor political planning have pushed us that point. Ultimately, the goal of the government is to pretty much eradicate rural Ireland. Forcing masses of people to live within a geographically small area is the most economical way for society to function. Rural Ireland's heyday has come and gone, it's simply taking it's time to dwindle down.
myshirt wrote: » No. Look how much it costs to get services to these people. Hospitals, ambulances, fire trucks, road networks, schools, primary care centres, broadband, electricity. It is too much and not possible, and thus these people are at more risk than we want them to be. Girl on the radio the other day living right in the backarse of Donegal, lost her mother, a hit and run. Really sad stuff. Amongst many things that went wrong, the granting of planning permission for that house was one.
Dirty Dingus McGee wrote: » But it is possible, people in rural areas don't really have a severe lack of broadband,electricity,schools,roads,ambulances etc Look at all the murder victims in Dublin, many things went wrong but amongst them was the fact that those people lived in Dublin.
myshirt wrote: » Do you know who pays for all that for you? Dublin. And is it a sensible spend? No. Because we can do much better with our money. And yes, 10 times more likely to get shot in Dublin than New York. But that is because I don't live in New York.
Corkgirl18 wrote: » I think my kids would have a better quality of life there.
gizmo81 wrote: » I've grown tired of Dublin. 10 odd years ago Dublin was great IMO Now it's overcrowded, everyones out for themselves and it's just grim.