wakka12 wrote: » I don't get the idea of forcing tiny towns like athlone to develop into something important It would be a lot more effective and beneficial to just build a new town at that stage with well planned zoning,road layout and everything else than pumping loads of money into some provincial town and trying to make its already established and small scale urban fabric something its not Places like athlone have no infrastructure or anything remarkable about to warrant large investment in it that wouldn't be more beneficial than starting a new town which could easily and very quickly grow to same size as athlone, but it'd be a lot more efficient town
Harry Palmr wrote: » There is a case to be made to develop a large centre in the geographic centre of the country.
bk wrote: » I don't get why us Irish people are so obsessed with large homes. What about quality over quantity?
Shurimgreat wrote: » No. They are over-reacting and still living as if we are in the recession. We've moved on. The economy is on its feet again. We are nearing full employment. We don't need to bend over backwards to get every job possible. We don't need to put thousands of new jobs in the city centre to satisfy short term political needs, and forget about the long term misery for commuters. I suppose I can be objective about this as I don't live in Dublin. But looking from outside, its easy to see the mistakes being made. If you want to be crushed on the Luas every morning or backed up in buses while the Luas passes by, then by all means keep doing what you are doing. More jobs for the city centre is certainly the way to achieve this. :rolleyes: If only there was another way?!
Harry Palmr wrote: » There is a case to be made to develop a large centre in the geographic centre of the country. Somewhere that is well placed for available cheap land on a main route (N6, and the Shannon river) that can act as an east-west pivot between Dublin and Galway. When you look at a map it's pretty bereft of economic activity outside agriculture.
dr.fuzzenstein wrote: » OK, so how about this. If it really galls you SO much that people live rurally, create a fund to purchase all one-off houses on CPO and pay to relocate all rural dwellers into houses or apartments that have connections to electricity, water, gas, sewage and proper waste water system. All purchased houses would have to be demolished by the state. I'm sure that is a totally workable solution, not only from a financial point of view but also from a point of view of dumping a million or more extra people into towns and villages, especially in ireland where infrastructure is never designed for peak demand, but only ever for average demand. What will it cost to upgrade infrastructure and services when half of Ireland decides to move? Suddenly not looking too rosy anymore that smart plan, isn't it?
wakka12 wrote: » Yeh Im sure the area needs economic support. But as I said, you'd be better off having a large scale plan for a new town that could act a lynch pin between several other established midlands town and they could grow together into a city maybe.
Shurimgreat wrote: » Depopulating the rest of the country and piling more and more people into one or two large urban centres like Dublin is not the solution. The infrastructure resources of Dublin are limited. Its obvious to most people adding more LUAS carriages or extending the LUAS is not the answer. You extend the LUAS, more people go on it, leading to more congestion. Either go underground or put the brakes on further industry and new jobs in Dublin city centre. And to think our politicians were hoping to attract thousands of workers to the Docklands and IFSC as a result of Brexit. Where would they live and how would they commute? Ah sure I guess the politicians don't care as long as they get more tax. The whole thing is beyond a farce.
Shurimgreat wrote: » Ah sure I guess the politicians don't care as long as they get more tax. The whole thing is beyond a farce.
blanch152 wrote: » The plan is to double the size of Cork, Limerick, Galway and Waterford. Dublin will grow but at a much slower pace, so the points you make are immaterial.
cgcsb wrote: » There's no need for any of that, a shift to urbanization will take place gradually and naturally if the subsidies are ended. All that needs to be done is 1)ban the construction of new one off homes that are more than 1km from their nearest village, with exemptions made for farmers and foresters 2)bring in a septic tank charge to fund a septic tank inspection regime which will cut pollution of the water table instantly 3)End all of the broadband schemes The result is over a period of 20 years our population will gradually rebalance to a more sustainable settlement pattern. An overnight schange as you suggest would be unworkable.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » Urban dwellers can't survive without the food that floods in from rural areas.
cgcsb wrote: » Which they pay for at the tills and through excessive small farm subsidy.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » Not only that but the figures that people sprout are not giving the real story when you consider how many people travel into cities from rural areas to work and shop. These are no doubt being considered as "city taxpayers" and "city spenders" when the figures are being massaged to suit an anti-rural agenda.
BrianBoru00 wrote: » Athlone is not a tiny town. Perhaps you should check your facts before contributing as you seem to just bark out ridiculous comments - you want to buid a new town instead of developing Athlone which already has a large third level college, 4 secondary schools, two large shopping centres, a rail line and is the most important crossing point on the river Shannon on the main M6 motorway - approximately midway between Galway and Dublin and with a population of 21k and large tracts of lands to develop between the river and the motorway. There are also major multinational IT and Pharmaceutical firms located there. Do you have anything to contribute which you could actually back up?
MeTheMan wrote: » It may only have 28% of the population but Dublin has around 45% of employment.
Sam Russell wrote: » Athlone has a major flooding problem.
Shurimgreat wrote: » Its madness to encourage the growth of more jobs around the docklands given the current infrastructure and housing difficulties.
cgcsb wrote: » Dublin's infrastructure is limited because we've blown the infrastructure budget on MEGA motorways to Tuam and New Ross. ,maintenance of an impossibly large road L road network and lets not forget an impossible to implement broadband scheme. Altogether billions wasted on that rubbish.
dr.fuzzenstein wrote: This kind of idiotic boxed-in thinking will ensure Ireland will never be Switzerland or Norway, both of which have very nice countryside BTW
Tell me how wrote: » Some would argue we've done the invest in Dublin and it hasn't worked.
cgcsb wrote: » yet we have a cohort of politicians diverting funding away from infrastructure and housing in Dublin because they want more IDA grants and fibre broadband down their boreen.
MayoSalmon wrote: » In terms of GDP per capita were already ahead of both Norway and Switzerland and we have countryside and scenery to rival both. In terms of energy resources Norway is oil rich and the Swiss generate half their energy via Nuclear.
Deleted User wrote: » Politicians representing their own area is hardly shocking or unusual? A quick search suggests the Dublin received IDA funding about in proportion to its population in 2016. Some counties got nothing.https://www.irishtimes.com/business/three-counties-got-no-ida-grant-funding-last-year-1.3299562?mode=amp How much should they get?