Limerick_Lass wrote: » Lads this thread is so depressing to read .... is it just getting worse so?
bigpink wrote: » Yeah deffo good to have an alternative.But I think it's cafe open to the public.If I was the shop I'd be pissed off they being trying for years to get Nicholas Street going wheres I think Treaty City got alot of council help
bigpink wrote: » I saw people sitting outside Treaty City Brewery drinking pints seems to be tables and seats now. Also they are advertising coffee I say Bakehouse 22 Tracy's pretty pissed with that
MarkR wrote: Hertz car sales sign up in coonagh just past applegreen.
kilburn wrote: » Strange spot for them to be fair
Reputable Rog wrote: It’s on one of the main arterial routes into City, why is it a strange location?
kilburn wrote: » I presume you have seen the site, it's small would have thought they would have gone into a main dealer style showroom.
ChewBerecca wrote: » I'd say they'd each have their own clientele to be fair. Lots of people would feel weird getting their lunch coffee in a brewery and the brewery may not be as experienced baristas as the cafe for a while. Plus TCB don't do food at the minute so Bakehouse would get customers looking for food (other than potential pub grub from Katie Dalys).
sioda wrote: » Old limerick sports store is opening as another phone shop thankfully as we dont have enough of them as is 🤬😡😠😡🤬
Cookiemunster wrote: » Surprised this hasn't been posted yet.US bathroom firm to create 42 jobs in Limerick
mdmix wrote: » I'm surprised the examiner couldn't pick a better headline, "Limerick flush with new toilet jobs", was just sitting there
bigpink wrote: » A young fashion student has opened a studio/shop in Adare cottages called Aofie Ireland she is getting alot of coverage online Brave girl that cottage is 3 grand a month rent my brother was telling me he recognised it from the Limerick Leader story
Treehelpplease wrote: » Shame its in a business park and not the city centre
ChewBerecca wrote: Plus easier for deliveries if its outside the centre, you want to be limiting the amount of trucks and vans in a city centre not increasing it.
ChewBerecca wrote: » Don't think anyone wants to be carrying boxes of tiles or a toilet a few hundred metres to their car if it was in the city centre. Plus easier for deliveries if its outside the centre, you want to be limiting the amount of trucks and vans in a city centre not increasing it.
kilburn wrote: » To a point but need businesses in the city also which would need vans and trucks
ChewBerecca wrote: » Yes, but even in other cities most of the home improvement stores/builders merchants are outside the city centres. These stores need easy access for collection/delivery of heavy goods, business park is a perfect place to allow continuous traffic of heavier vehicles and customer parking. If the store went into the city centre we'll end up with more vans double parked because people don't want to transport or carry heavy goods to a legal parking space, and more threads like the William Street one.
OfTheMarsWongs wrote: » Newsoms (hardware) on William St (now Dealz I think) had a customer car park out the back. It seemed to do a great trade till all the DIY shops opened on the outskirts.
OfTheMarsWongs wrote: Newsoms (hardware) on William St (now Dealz I think) had a customer car park out the back.
kilburn wrote: » Newsoms & Spaights all did a great trade Bus stops right outside the door
FutureGuy wrote: » Phone shop AND handbags.