Ten years after being placed on the City Council's Derelict Sites Register, the Corrib Great Southern will be
demolished in the next few months.
Meanwhile, those of a certain vintage, already bemoaning the loss of The Warwick, will see another part of their youth disappear with the demolition of the former Oasis nightclub in Salthill.
And a third derelict site, which had become an awful eyesore, the former Connacht Laundry site on St. Helen's Street, is currently in the process of being demolished.
Galway City Council has confirmed that demolition works are to commence at two derelict sites in the city, with work at a third location almost complete.
The former Corrib Great Southern Hotel on the Dublin Road and the former Oasis Nightclub in Salthill will be knocked down in the coming months, as part of an effort to deal with abandoned premises in the city.
The local authority has already issued orders to the owners of the sites in question, informing them that action was needed to deal with their properties.
The Orders require the demolition of the buildings to ground level and stipulate that works must be completed within a specified time frame.
It is anticipated that demolition of the hotel, close to the Galway Mayo Institute of Technology, will begin in early December and will take around four months to complete.
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Meanwhile, discussions are ongoing before the demolition of a third building, the former Oasis nightclub in Salthill.
Once packed to the rafters with students and visitors to the area, it has also been lying idle for over a decade.
The property has been recently acquired by a new owner.
Furthermore:
There are 16 sites on a Derelict Sites Register maintained by the City Council, with another 50 locations being actively monitored.
And finally, a part of the article that really stood out for me:
In 2019 a total of €123,900 was levied on owners of derelict sites around Galway.
However, these charges remain unpaid.