1huge1 wrote: » How does everyone think Varadkar did overall? Not an easy job in the current environment.
Jack Noble wrote: » He was growing into the role after a shaky start. His belated conversion to rail-based transport and Dart Underground was welcome -- let's hope a Pascal Donohoe gets on the same track quickly. But Pascal's problems are child's play compared to what Leo will face in Angola. Best of luck to him there.
He rebalanced things towards Dublin
tharlear wrote: » is this not baiting
alias no.9 wrote: » Fantastic Map* of existing and proposed rail, tram, metro and brt lines in Dublin, shamelessly borrowed from here *doesn't work on phones
Sam Russell wrote: » BBC2 are showing: The 15 billion Railway on Wednesday 15th Jul at 9.00pm.Urban Heart SurgeryNot currently available on BBC iPlayer Episode 1 of 3 Duration: 1 hour This series follows a team of more than 10,000 engineers and construction workers as they race to build a brand new railway under London - Crossrail - London's new Underground. Costing fifteen billion pounds, it's the biggest engineering project in Europe and a huge challenge to pull off. As they burrow the forty-two kilometres of tunnels, engineers must battle to make sure that listed buildings don't crack, London Underground trains keep running, roads don't shut and the City stays in business. Crucially, they must drive one of their gigantic 1,000-tonne tunnel boring machines through a tiny gap in the congested underbelly of Tottenham Court Road station without the passengers on the tube platforms below knowing they are there.Might give an idea of how DU could be built. Also, might give an idea of costs.
alias no.9 wrote: » You just don't know what you're going to find
murphaph wrote: » One look at that documentary and you'll understand why a park in a central location would be preferred over a small space surrounded on all sides by historic buildings. The Crossrail engineers have little choice where they tunnel as there are already many many tunnels under London and for Crossrail to be any use it must interchange with a host of the existing stations.
1huge1 wrote: » You wouldn't find any bones in St Stephens Green
alias no.9 wrote: » Hoggen Green (College Green) was part of viking Dublin, Stephen's Green was incorporated into the city much later.
Jack Noble wrote: » One skeleton found when you scratch the surface on a small part of College Green. Can you imagine what they would find if they dug a bloody great hole for a massive underground interchange station on an area that has been settled and occupied since the Middle Ages?
Oasis_Dublin wrote: » Hopefully they save some more of any discoveries made at Christ Church, rather than just cementing over them ala Wood Quay.
D.L.R. wrote: » Agreed, that was disgusting - bare faced vandalism of our heritage and history.
D.L.R. wrote: » Dart Underground will be going directly under the oldest parts of Medieval Dublin (Dublin Castle, Christchurch). Expect very significant finds here. Hopefully this will be catered for in a similar manner to Crossrail, where archaeologists have been granted the time and space to do some very important work.
Jack Noble wrote: » There's a big difference between tunnelling 20-plus metres under the surface and digging a big hole for a station box. Much of the station for Christ Church, including the, entrance, ticket hall and access elevators and lifts, is under the plaza at the Civic Offices facing Winetavern Street. Archeology on that site was done 40 years ago for the Civic Offices.
D.L.R. wrote: » Fair points. I'd still expect plenty of intersting stuff to come out of the ground between the Green excavation and the SSG-Christchurch tunnel section though.
Also regarding college green, lets remember there are plenty of cities around Europe which have excavated stations in their historic core, so its not unprecedented. Just expensive and slow.