marno21 wrote: » Tender out for archaelogical consultancy services for this projecthttps://irl.eu-supply.com/app/rfq/publicpurchase_frameset.asp?PID=138340&B=ETENDERS_SIMPLE&PS=1&PP=ctm/Supplier/publictenders
user1842 wrote: » Does this mean they believe the planning decision will be positive?
HabibiLibnen wrote: » Does this mean it could start in late 2019 once the tendering process is complete?
HabibiLibnen wrote: » All of a sudden there seems to be a real acceleration in the progress of various schemes. In fairness to TII, they have been working quietly in the background on very tight budgets to see the 2 N5 projects, N22, N4 etc etc reach shovel ready status. It's good news for the regions and the sense that finally the country is back in business.
Senator Feighan says that this is a dangerous stretch of road, which is extremely busy, so this work will be welcomed to the many people who use it.
marno21 wrote: » LOL
HabibiLibnen wrote: » It's busy relative to the appalling standard of the road that links Ballina, Westport etc to Dublin. It's a scary road to drive on during wet weather on a Friday evening, especially with the bad bends and junctions at Frenchpark and the Athlone - Sligo road at Tulsk. I believe Denis Naughten acquired funding for this road last year which meant once planning was approved, it would be ring fenced for progression to tender. Might this happen this year with construction to commence in 2020?
HabibiLibnen wrote: It's a scary road to drive on during wet weather on a Friday evening, especially with the bad bends and junctions at Frenchpark and the Athlone - Sligo road at Tulsk.
MayoSalmon wrote: » Calm down on the dramatics like...perfectly fine stretch of road just windy is all. Once this is done along with the N4 Mullingar to Longford the drive from Mayo to Dublin will be dare I say it joyful.
HabibiLibnen wrote: » If your definition of 'a perfectly fine stretch of road' for a national primary route is circa 35 kms of no hard shoulder, poor vertical and horizontal alignments, severe bends, dozens of junctions, crossroads, private house entrances etc, well more power to you. A simple Google search of 'accident N5 Roscommon' will prove my point. Road safety is the number one purpose of this scheme, hence the low spec single carriageway design with roundabouts at junctions. And as you alluded to, this will benefit Mayo drivers and the Mayo economy far more than Roscommon as the N4 and M6/N61 carry the bulk of traffic while also serving the main population centres of the county.
RedDevil55 wrote: » Hopefully there's no unexpected economic downturn that stops the shovels hitting the ground.
Aontachtoir wrote: » Suddenly, Brexit!
marno21 wrote: » I have no interest in starting an argument with you because we are on the same page but relative to the rest of the national primary network this is a quiet road. It carries approx 5k AADT per day. There are large sections of the national primary road network that are also shocking and significantly busier. This road is where it is purely for political reasons, from the days of Kenny and Ring. There was an archaeological services tender issues in late last year that should start this year now that it's approved. Archaeological works will take more than a year so I'd be guessing the earliest this will start is Q1 2021 or so. The fact that there is currently zero competition apart from the M28 will be a significant help in getting it to construction quick.
road_high wrote: » I drove the stretch from Strokestown to Tulsk lately and I was actually pleasantly surprised- had they done a few realignments and widening already to the existing N5? I didn’t think it overly bad tbh. Could they not have upgraded the existing fully rather than new green field build? The old N9 or existing N24 were/are far worse routes for comparison sake.
road_high wrote: » I was on the best part of the road so, fair enough! There is indeed a decent t climbing lane out in. We need more of thiose, NRA seem very averse to them. I think they’re great