dolphin city wrote: » it a complete marketing ploy, thought up last year to try to get crowds into the place - there is no historical thought put into it. a bit like the big sign now in dominick street that says - you are now entering old galway - whats that all about. next they will be calling eyre square the "american quarter" or the "new world quarter"
Skinback wrote: » It's the same in Dublin where they now call the end of the South Circular Road and top of Camden St "The Village".....ridiculous. Whatever little snot thought that crap up should be keelhauled.
Lapin wrote: » nobody noticed or cared that Temple Bar is in fact located on the right bank of the Liffey !
bryanjf wrote: » :rolleyes: how ironic
dolphin city wrote: » it's not "the west" - it's "back the wesht" LOL and it always will be. It was definitely a marketing ploy last year to christen the quay street area the "latin quarter" - I really don't care if it was in people's heads for twenty years - it was never official - and I have lived here for that long and never once referred to it as that - maybe it was an "exclusive" group that called in that in their heads. It was a definite marketing ploy last year - getting banners and posters done up all of a sudden calling it "the latin quarter" - think it had something got to to with the volvo coming in and people wanting us to look more "cosmopolitan" or something like that. Most locals throw their eyes up to heaven when they hear someone mentioning it tho.
dolphin city wrote: » it a complete marketing ploy, thought up last year to try to get crowds into the place
Deleted User wrote: » who cares if locals throw their eyes to heaven
McTigs wrote: » they couldn't care less if some local dole junkies throw their eyes up to heaven
topper75 wrote: » Ha ha! :D The self-loathing Irish. What will they hate about themselves next? Who is this 'marketing' aimed at? If it is foreign tourists, I'm sure they could have booked a flight to somewhere genuinely Latin if that is what turned them on. If it is Irish punters, do they seriously feel more sophisticated if they are supping Guinness and looking out at the drizzle in a district of town with an exotic-sounding name. Latin quarter indeed.
Fuinseog wrote: » there was a time when you would get mugged if you went down kirwans lane
biko wrote: » If they're all so latin how come no bartender understands "Tribuo mihi vinum"?
queensinead wrote: » When the Left Bank, or the Latin Quarter of Paris was the model for studenty /cobblestoned//artistic gentrification, the term was applied to similar areas of other cities. The Latin Quarter of Paris was of course named for the Sorbonne university, which is at its heart, and where students used to speak Latin in the Middle Ages. Then you heard "Dublin's Latin Quarter", "Galway's Latin Quarter" to describe areas of other cities who hoped to catch that Parisian vibe. As a non-Galwegian who visits Galway occasionally, I don't care what they call it. It is all beautiful. The little cobblestone streets, the restaurants, and cafes, the old stone ...Those lovely walks out past the swans. There seems to be water everywhere you look (some of it coming from the sky, unfortunately) and the whole atmosphere is just so good Whatever you have done to the city, congratulations. It's a great place to visit
biko wrote: » Shop street is stones (not tarmac)......
ErnieBert wrote: » Bizarrely enough, that stone on the pedestrianised streets was imported from.........China. It created a lot of hot air at a City Council meeting when it happened. That must be around 12 years ago now.
ErnieBert wrote: » Bizarrely enough, that stone on the pedestrianised streets was imported from.........China. It created a lot of hot air at a City Council meeting when it happened. That must be around 12 years ago now. Connamara is full of beautiful stone and Galway City Council imports tonnes of it from China? Nuts!
dolphin city wrote: » maybe we should call it CHINA TOWN - although they probably have that in the works for the dominic street area when they need more money. LOL