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Moving Out Of Dublin

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,624 ✭✭✭✭meeeeh


    I live in Midlands close to a town and I would probably find Donegal too remote even as a country dweller. That being said the town we live in is currently thriving, the center is busier because those who are working from home are spending their days and money locally.

    Whatever you might decide to do I would definitely rent first. It could be that the city centres will become kips for a while because work from home will become more prevalent. Or the now thriving local towns will empty out because commuters will move back to cities. I have a feeling that Corona is changing the way we are going to live in future but it's very hard to tell in what direction it will go.

    We have two kids, local school is nice, we have spacious house and garden and woods on the doorstep. Broadband is a bit rubbish but getting better. When we want to go out in Dublin we need to drive for an hour to hour and a half. Sometimes we stay overnight and sometimes we drive back anyone of us doesn't drink. Our mortgage is currently around one sixth of our net income. For a family our location is lovely, for single person I would not advise it and for a couple without kids it would depend what your interests are. There are pluses and minuses everywhere.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,295 ✭✭✭Claw Hammer


    Ray Palmer wrote: »
    You are kidding nobody. I have a choice of 4 sushi places that deliver to my door. The main thing is choice and plenty of it. Can quit my job and get another within a week. Can fly internationally and be in my house with 30 minutes of getting off the plane in Dublin.

    I lived in Athlone for 6 months and this is considered a big town. I remember going to the cinema there and the projection was larger than the screen. I don't go to the nearest cinema here because I don't like their seats. Choice is what I like

    I lived in Athlone for a time when I was a teenager. I thought it was a kip. Other people I know move their later in life and quite like it. A big town is just that, a big town. It would have some of the features of city life and will be close to rural life. Within 3 Miles of the old bridge Athlone, there are industrial estates with large international firms employing hundreds of people, there are modern shopping centres 1/3 level college et cetera. There is also a considerable area of bog and a landscape untouched in generations. Despite all this there is no hospital worth the name in or near the town and those inhabitants of the town who require medical treatment frequently have to travel to Dublin or Galway to be seen. The population of the greater Lawn area, giving a generous 6 mile radius from the centre of the town is about the same as that of a smallish Dublin suburb. The difference in Dublin is that even if something is not in that suburb it is generally only a short distance away.

    Where somebody lives is a matter for individual choice but is simply not possible to have the equivalent lifestyle in one area than another. It is all about compromise.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,476 ✭✭✭✭Ush1


    Uber driver?

    No, IT consultant.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 657 ✭✭✭sally cinnamon89


    awec wrote: »
    I grew up in a large town OP, lived in Dublin for almost a decade, then moved to a small town. Anyone trying to tell you that town life (big or small) is like living in Dublin but just with a bit less choice is filling your head full of shite. I am not saying it is worse, I am saying it is a very different lifestyle. There is a lot less to do. The infrastructure around you is chalk and cheese, it just doesn't compare.

    You may love it, you may hate it, different strokes for different folks, but IMO you'd be mad to jump into it head first on the back of a weekend with your mates. If renting for a while is possible I would do that first.

    Fact.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,280 ✭✭✭✭Eric Cartman


    if you're living in Dublin but have a reasonable chance of being able to work from home what I'd do is google maps the major motorways and calculate 2 hours total drive from your current workplace, find a village with services around the nearest exit to that and look at it from there.

    if you had to go back 1-2 days a week its only a 2 hour drive, but you take advantage of the cheaper house prices and could end up in a great little village to put down roots.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 657 ✭✭✭sally cinnamon89


    I'm in my mid 20's and living in the city. I love it and suit's myself and my partner's lifestyle at the moment. We can go out and about very easily cycling everywhere and meeting up with friends. I think city living appeals to the younger generations and as people get older they look for a slower pace of life. I cant see myself living in the city in 15 years time. Seem's logical that people will slowly move out. But I would rather have a nice house with garden in a slightly rural area then pay a bomb for a semi-d in a housing estate but that's personal preference


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,921 ✭✭✭Grab All Association


    awec wrote: »
    Can we please get some perspective here? While I am sure Letterkenny has schools and some form of broadband, and it has houses, let's not pretend that a medium sized town has these things as accessible as the capital city.

    Regarding broadband, I live in rural Tipperary with 1000mb FTTH broadband. Most of rural Ireland these days has better broadband than Dublin.

    Recently got into an argument with a Dubliner who was threatening the Eircom reps on Twitter over his <5mb VDSL and at the exact same time criticising the NBS which would probably get him FTTH. If we don’t have it, you shouldn’t is the attitude there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,202 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    we have a thread where everyone is delighted with their own choice and taking great delight in telling everyone else why there's is wrong.

    I moved from the country to the south side of dublin (went to UCD and stayed basically), would i move back home? nope, considered it, decided against it, couldnt be happier with my decision, we have lovely neighbours and a great life. But that matters very little to the OP.

    I cant see a reason for you not to try it for a year, what have you got to lose? seems like very little,

    you can even come back and tell us how it went.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,202 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    Regarding broadband, I live in rural Tipperary with 1000mb FTTH broadband. Most of rural Ireland these days has better broadband than Dublin.

    if you happen to be on the fibre roll out (which is also happening in dublin believe it or not)

    the reality is your worst case in dublin re BB is a lot better than your worst case in a rural location.

    and no domestic user needs 1000mb.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Regarding broadband, I live in rural Tipperary with 1000mb FTTH broadband. Most of rural Ireland these days has better broadband than Dublin.

    Recently got into an argument with a Dubliner who was threatening the Eircom reps on Twitter over his <5mb VDSL and at the exact same time criticising the NBS which would probably get him FTTH. If we don’t have it, you shouldn’t is the attitude there.

    This is not even close to being true.


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  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Cyrus wrote: »
    if you happen to be on the fibre roll out (which is also happening in dublin believe it or not)

    the reality is your worst case in dublin re BB is a lot better than your worst case in a rural location.

    and no domestic user needs 1000mb.

    Virgin offer 1gb.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,202 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    awec wrote: »
    Virgin offer 1gb.

    as do eir/sky/vodafone/digiweb if you get FTTH, which i have, but i dont pay for the 1000mb package because i dont need it :P

    500mb is plenty :cool:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,474 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    I think the South east is ideal- Waterford, Wexford, Kilkenny, Carlow- some lovely spots and great value houses but key is far easier, better access to Dublin than Donegal or the west of Ireland- plus much better weather. Either motorway and/or train acess to Dublin- i think going forward work is likely to be a more mix of WFH and a couple days mixed with the office. Between 1 and 2 hours from Dublin to keep connected with the office more easily.
    WFH with regular office visits to Dublin would still be a pain from Donegal I think.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 769 ✭✭✭annoyedgal


    Just to throw in my 2 cents, grew up in the north west. Beautful place but the weather is not to underestimated, it's grim at best and depressing at worst.
    Yes when the sun is out there is nowhere to beat it but it rains a hell of a lot. Completely different climate to the east coast. Definitely rent first and see if you can hack it!
    I had a yearning to move home that was cured by a long wet and grey week in June that reminded me how depressing the weather could be.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,441 ✭✭✭NSAman


    annoyedgal wrote: »
    Just to throw in my 2 cents, grew up in the north west. Beautful place but the weather is not to underestimated, it's grim at best and depressing at worst.
    Yes when the sun is out there is nowhere to beat it but it rains a hell of a lot. Completely different climate to the east coast. Definitely rent first and see if you can hack it!
    I had a yearning to move home that was cured by a long wet and grey week in June that reminded me how depressing the weather could be.

    Weather isn't everything. I am missing home and for the past 4 months it has been in the 30s. OK for the next few months it'll be snow and -20C - -30C..;)

    Family, ties, pace of life, things to do, friends all play into someone's decision.

    Don't get me wrong, City life has it's benefits but at this stage in life, not for me. I still maintain a residence in two cities but also enjoy the garden/land that comes with rural life, not to mention the quietness, the community and the family/friends that I have.

    I think we can all agree, City life/Rural living both have pros and cons and its finding out where you are happiest..;)


  • Registered Users Posts: 46 Jack0125


    Living in Donegal if you going on city breaks you have to take the day before you trip off to travel donegal to dublin and the day after. Same just whenever using the airport. And this will return some day post covid.

    Going to a concert is not just getting train into dublin for a concert and home. Its an overnight stay when you coming from donegal and travel day up and down.

    Weather on the western seaboard does get to some people.

    If you accept your remoteness you will be fine


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,474 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    annoyedgal wrote: »
    Just to throw in my 2 cents, grew up in the north west. Beautful place but the weather is not to underestimated, it's grim at best and depressing at worst.
    Yes when the sun is out there is nowhere to beat it but it rains a hell of a lot. Completely different climate to the east coast. Definitely rent first and see if you can hack it!
    I had a yearning to move home that was cured by a long wet and grey week in June that reminded me how depressing the weather could be.

    Have to agree and think it’s something people underestimate- I live in Kilkenny and there’s definitely a difference- often in leitrim and the rain and dampness is noticeable. There’s a kind of bite in the air a lot of the time. Rainfall can be over twice or more the average in the east/south east


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,342 ✭✭✭markpb


    People here keep suggesting that cities are great for young people and then you'd want to move to the country as you get older. That might be true for some people but it's not the gospel. I grew up in a small town in the midlands, big garden, family nearby, etc and moved to Dublin for college. When I had kids of my own, we talked about moving somewhere else and decided that this is where we want to stay. My parents were run ragged driving us kids around the place and I appreciated the hell out of it but I'm not sure I'm ready to make the same commitment.

    School is a <10 minute cycle and the 8 year old can already make that trip by herself if she wants. When they go to secondary school, it's 10 minutes on the Luas so they'll be well able to do that. GAA is < 10 minutes on the Luas or a 15 minute cycle so they can come and go to training by themselves if they want. Dundrum is 15 minutes on the Luas and city centre is 30 minutes away so they can meet friends, go the cinema, shopping, etc without needing a chauffeur. I'm not kicking them out the door every day but I like the freedom not to be tethered to their social lives :)

    Someone else mentioned it earlier in this thread but I used to dread getting up at 3:30am to be at the airport at 6am for a flight at 7am. Getting home was even worse. I lived in Santry for years and it was great - 30 minutes from getting on Dublin Bus to being at security or further never got old!


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,273 ✭✭✭The Spider


    Not all within a reasonable distance , though, that's the whole fecking point (I suspect that you're deliberately missing that point, though).

    How many of them do you have access to in Letterkenny, seeing as that's what was brought up earlier?

    You pretty much have access to all of them in Waterford


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