lawred2 wrote: 75% of population growth 'should be' outside of Dublin..
hmmm wrote: When you read that at the start you know the plan is a crock.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » That I would be slow to bet on, cars are terribly inefficient in slow moving traffic and when idling.
John_Rambo wrote: Every single occupant diesel Passat motoring along on the road is polluting more than your average Dublin bus with ninety people on board.
John_Rambo wrote: » Every single occupant diesel Passat motoring along on the road is polluting more than your average Dublin bus with ninety people on board.
John_Rambo wrote: » Inefficient, a waste of money. However, when the cars moving at pace it’s more efficient and is better value for money. But… it’s polluting more. .
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » This is not a given. A car crusing along in 6th at 100km/h for 30 mins could easily sit at a lower average rpm than a car constantly speeding up and slowing down for 30 mins in traffic. A modern diesel in a high gear at cursing speed is not a whole lot above an idle rpm. I'd personally rather take my chances with the pollution and have the comfort, flexibility and practicality of my car. The only reason I choose the bus over my car is when I'm going on the beer after work.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » This is not a given. A car crusing along in 6th at 100km/h for 30 mins could easily sit at a lower average rpm than a car constantly speeding up and slowing down for 30 mins in traffic.A modern diesel in a high gear at cursing speed is not a whole lot above an idle rpm. I'd personally rather take my chances with the pollution and have the comfort, flexibility and practicality of my car. The only reason I choose the bus over my car is when I'm going on the beer after work.
Tell me how wrote: » So we're agreed, more jobs in towns/ cities outside of Dublin so the whole of Leinster and beyond isn't pouring into it as part of their 12 hour day.
John_Rambo wrote: » Basically the higher the revolutions of the internal combustion engine the more fuel is burnt and more pollutants are released. Trust me, there’s no lower amount of revolutions than idle.
Luka Lemon Town wrote: » In stop start traffic you are not idling all the time you end up reving quite high often and emissions can be higher while idling than driving at low revs so you are not as right as you think you are.
John_Rambo wrote: Now you're catching on. That's why city travel by bike, bus and train is so much less polluting than the car travel that rural people are forced to use. Most of Dublin’s quays are now bus and cycle with only one car lane because of the amount of people cycling and busing is so much more than driving.
Tell me how wrote: » They abandoned plans to convert lanes on the quays to a cycle lane last September. Took 500k or something to make that decision.
BonnieSituation wrote: » Good stuff. I certainly hope you have a nice big driveway for it. Mother above.
Tell me how wrote: » Why do you both disagree with this ideal?
hmmm wrote: Google and Intel are not moving to Mullingar or Westport. They can be attracted to Dublin & surrounding areas if we are lucky.
Tell me how wrote: » How did Apple end up in Cork and Dell in Limerick? Did they not get the memo?
hmmm wrote: » It's not realistic. Google and Intel are not moving to Mullingar or Westport. They can be attracted to Dublin & surrounding areas if we are lucky.
Zebra3 wrote: » Actually intel do (or used to) employ about 100 people or so in Shannon.
lawred2 wrote: » tax deals I believe
hmmm wrote: » Gosh, 100. Google have 7000 people in Dublin. They are not moving to Shannon, no matter how many railways are built. The infrastructure deficiencies of the one city we have at scale are not properly addressed, while the plan goes off on dreams about 75% of growth happening outside Dublin. It's aspirational bull to keep the non-Dublin lobby happy, and has no place in an infrastructure plan that should be grounded in reality.
LeinsterDub wrote: However can we stop also the continuation of Dublin v the rest argument by comparing cities like Cork and Limerick to towns the likes of Mullingar and Westport