pm1977x wrote: » Rasam if you fancy an upmarket Indian, Delhi Rasoi if you fancy a decent but slightly cheaper one.
Gareth Keenan wrote: » Haddington/Oliveto, Hartleys and Casper Giumbinis. And the Sunday market. Sorted.
Mav11 wrote: » I see that DLRCC has been allocated an additional €9m for cycling and walking infrastructure. To be completed by end November.
coylemj wrote: » I wonder have they started spending that on the inbound N11 between Fosters Ave. and UCD? There's already a cycle lane there. And a monitor with an LED counter to show the cynics that it's being used. But now there's roadworks going on in the inside lane, was on the 46A yesterday and we had to drive around them.
Glencarraig wrote: » They need to spend some of that on the Leopardstown Road cycle rollercoaster, it's in a woeful state and cyclists wont use it.
Larbre34 wrote: » At the time that road was rebuilt in the mid-90s, a number of well resourced residents banded together and went to court to preserve certain large trees on private property rather than have them removed for the road widening scheme. Essentially a very expensive bespoke cocoon was built around the root systems at certain points, where the corridor of the new road was at the absolute minimum and so the cycle path out of necessity was raised up and over these. There is no way of levelling them now.
Glencarraig wrote: » Its not just "the hump" as it's known locally, the whole section from Whites Cross to Laura Lynn on both sides needs looking at.
Cyrus wrote: » If there are dedicated cycle paths should cyclists be confined to them rather than choosing to use them or the road ? I know at present they aren’t but if we move to a phase of building more infrastructure something like that would make sense I think .
rubadub wrote: » Yeah, the hump does not bother me much, it would be nice if on the exit of it the cycle lane ran right onto the next road, instead you are meant to turn and cross with pedestrians, many people will just hop off the path and up on the next. I wonder if there was ever an accident there. Then many of the driveways have very sharp dips and so pedestrians tend to walk on the cycletrack so many speedier cyclists just stick to the road. Many also do this so they can pass along the Torquay road junction without having to stop with pedestrians as before. The various traffic poles and electrical box opposite Torquay road are also an accident waiting to happen. The traffic lights could have been nearer to the kerb, or ideally be mounted to the electrical poles or have new poles against the wallhttps://goo.gl/maps/aUagoymj5i277q2P7
JayRoc wrote: » That's a perfectly reasonable question to ask, especially if you are a non-cyclist. The question I always ask in response is "why do you think a cyclist might choose to use the road rather than a particular cycle path/lane?"
Cyrus wrote: » Not sure but if there is dedicated cycle infrastructure it should be used imo otherwise why spend the money .
rubadub wrote: » Why spend the money indeed, it is sickening to see so much money pissed away on lanes which were very unlikely to be used a lot. .
RosieJoe wrote: » Cycling forum is this way -->