Tell me how wrote: » I think you are painting an overly idylic picture here which is not the norm for everyone. I'm not sure most would even subscribe to it. It kind of sounds like "an artists impression". You are lucky if that is fully your experience.
Tell me how wrote: » Also, that Tedtalk wouldn't exactly inspire me. An architect talking about the causes of and solutions to loneliness and linking it directly to the built environment is a tenuous link in my view.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » Water we pay for and have done so for years unlike any one living in an urban area, we pay for our own sewage managment unlike anyone in an urban area. Electricity we already pay more for and pay more to get connected, optical fibre should be provided to the gate of the house any further and people can pay more same as you do in an urban area where fibre right to your door will cost more. I'm not asking for busses or footpaths or a LUAS or public lighting or any of the other services you have provided for you.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » In most instances this is physically impossible or far far too expensive due to the cost of land.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » Nonsense, I've personally worked on a number of very highly funded EU projects involving partners all across Europe with extremely high speed fibre to the home BB provision in rural and sparsely populated areas being one of the main areas of interest.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » In anycase you do realise its already happening? In a few years time a very large proporation of rural areas will be covered by fibre broadband. Its only a matter of doing it right once, addational houses can easily be added in as requried once the areas are covered by the distribution fibres. Don't know why you think villages will be left behind when nearly every road is having fibre rolled out over the next few years never mind towns and villages. How long its taking is an issue for sure though, it should all be fast tracked, laying fibres over head is fast and should not be taking so long.
Shurimgreat wrote: » Sadly the Dublin centric brigade will argue the biggest social welfare scrounger who lives in Dublin contributes more to this country than the hard working tax paying rural worker.
jobbridge4life wrote: » Link?
jobbridge4life wrote: » If the above is remotely accurate the NBP would be totally unnecessary, are you happy therefore for it to be cancelled?
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » In fairness there is a lot of companies who opt for Galway and Cork also so in reality as these cities already have a large number of MNC in medical, pharma, IT and tech etc there is no real reason why other companies could not be pointed in the direction of these areas and incentivised if necessary. You might say that's still a job in an urban area but it opens up so many other parts of the country to the jobs having them outside Dublin. A job in an industrial estate outside Galway city could be commuted to from athlone, lots of Mayo, anywhere as far down as shannon and everywhere in between meaning people can live in thier home areas near family, have much cheaper costs of living for a higher standard of living etc. Working from home is becoming more prevalant also so with proper broadband this further increases possibilities for those who want to live rurally in their home areas but work in good jobs. It's very much the opposite from my perspective. I'm in my early 30's and while some people I know moved to Dublin either for college or for work in their early to mid 20's the majority have now returned back to the local area after getting married to settle down, build their houses etc. Dublin was seen as a necessity but once a bit of experience was built up any suitable job was jumped at in order to move back. The few I still know living in Dublin are basically only doing it as they cannot as yet get a suitable job back around the home area (or within say an hours commute). I myself had to a different part of the country (not Dublin) for work but over the last number of years have carefully tailored my experience to give me a good chance of finding a (good) job commutable from home and I really cannot wait to move back.
Shurimgreat wrote: » There is actually plenty of space on the outskirts of Dublin to build on. Provided the jobs are in that region, this is not a definition of urban sprawl. Urban sprawl happens when you have most of the employment in the centre of the city and most of the workers living in commuter belts. Leinster in particular would benefit from another major urban centre with a population of at least 100,000. One that is viable and self sufficient and not just a commuter offshoot of Dublin. To take one example. There are 3 major universities within a 5 mile radius of Dublin city centre, DCU, UCD and Trinity. Why or how this was allowed happen is beyond belief. There isn't another major university in the rest of Leinster. I think the only other major 3rd level institutions in the rest of the province are Carlow and Athlone ITs.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » Yes, the same as all your services are subsided by the tax payer. Its such a nonsense argument when you are benefitting far more from subsidies than a rural dwellers is.
It's cheaper but its also irrelevant. .
jmayo wrote: Sure half of Dublin will be under water by then
wakka12 wrote: » And they're constructing another large city centre college in grangegorman right now :pac: But also, you forgot maynooth, its a major college in leinster.
salmocab wrote: » To be fair grangegorman will be used instead of the city DITs so it’s not really a new college in the city it’s just 3 or 4 moving in together.
wakka12 wrote: » Well I think it might have changed since then. Im 22, a huge number of my friends from other countries stayed in dublin over the sumer even when college was over. They liked having so many more jobs to choose from, better night life and social life..the general buzz of a city over quite town life
wakka12 wrote: » Well I suppose but I think they're increasing the number of students in DIT considerably due to the new space they have on the grangegorman campus
Sam Russell wrote: » The plan 2040 should give a vision of where to place scarce resources to get the most benefit for the most people - a political choice.
MeTheMan wrote: » Surely the answer to that questions is always going to be Dublin.
BrianBoru00 wrote: » the average industrial wage is about 45k so its probably closer to 30k for a 30 year old. So a couple on 60K will have a choice to make - a 2 bedroom apartment in Stoneybatter or a 4 bed semi in Ashbourne or a 5 bed on 1 acre 2 miles outside Edenderry.
bk wrote: » A 2 bed apartment is perfectly fine if you have one child. Even fine with two kids if they aren't teenagers.
Zebra3 wrote: » Does this FG plan have to get the nod off tweedledee?
bk wrote: » I'm all of that, family and kid in a lovely apartment in Dublin. I don't get why us Irish people are so obsessed with large homes. What about quality over quantity? What about quality of your life experience?
bk wrote: » I'm all of that, family and kid in a lovely apartment in Dublin. I don't get why us Irish people are so obsessed with large homes. What about quality over quantity? What about quality of your life experience? The average Irish home contains just 2.75 people and on average people are only having 1.4 kids. Really, what are people doing with 5 bedroom houses? What are they filling them with? A 2 bed apartment is perfectly fine if you have one child. Even fine with two kids if they aren't teenagers. All over Europe kids being brought up in apartments, it is perfectly fine, we just aren't use to it. Or we even look done on it thinking of it like council flats. Are you really happier living in a 5 bedroom house, but a 3 hour commute to work every day? Do you have time and energy to actually play with your kids after all that commuting? I think people are really just sleep walking into their housing choices because they think it is a done thing. It doesn't have to be that way. You can marry and have kids and still enjoy the great vibrant life of a city, you just have to decide to think a little different.
MayoSalmon wrote: » Irish people live in particularly small homes all things considered. Sure you lucky to even get a parking space or a back garden these days in new builds in Dublin. Irish people have the 2nd highest birth rate in Europe and hence need the 3 bedroom semi to facilitate that.