Luas Connolly Station latest images

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    • #707315
      JJ
      Participant

      Here’s a few recent images of the current state of affairs at Connolly Station Luas works. I particularly like the railings along Harbourmaster Place (although the colour’s a bit dull ). The canopies have now bleached to a much lighter shade.

      JJ

    • #745799
      JJ
      Participant

      Image below canopy as seen from terrace level. The trams are really quite ugly when seen from above !

    • #745800
      JJ
      Participant

      Detail of HaArbourmaster Place railings.

    • #745801
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      Still cant get over the fact that this section cost €30 million.

    • #745802
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      got a side elevation photo? wasn’t the tented canopies supposed to step down to a lower level from the station concourse level? hard to see if they do in the first photograph

    • #745803
      chewy
      Participant

      i think this was mentioned before but i still don’t quite understand how these were designed with such thick poles? which now seemed it got an even thicker cladding around the vertical ones…

      i thought it would have only looked right with slender poles supporting the canopies

    • #745804
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Perhaps budget constraints meant the design got simplified?

    • #745805
      Anonymous
      Participant

      What design?

      Its bloody woeful, the Texaco childrens art comp has rarely seen worse!!!!!

    • #745806
      JJ
      Participant

      Here’s a side elevation taken a few weeks back before the cladding was applied.

      As for the costs the RPA has claimed that the actual figure is closer to 12 million. Still a heap of money though.

      Compaired to the original photomontages you can see that the structure has been made much bulkier and the support legs are fatter.

      JJ

    • #745807
      Niall
      Participant

      Sorry for sounding negative, but that is bloody awful!!!

    • #745808
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      Oh dear, that is very clumsily done. Absolutely no finesse or style. That’s so disappointing as plans I saw some time back looked like it could be quite good.

    • #745809
      Morlan
      Participant

      Yeah, ’tis pretty bad. Can’t wait for the Red line to open though.

    • #745810
      Morlan
      Participant

      Double post – Paul, sort out your server!

    • #745811
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      That’s so disappointing – I saw plans of the design originally and it looked like it could be quite good – that isn’t.

    • #745812
      Morlan
      Participant

      Double post

    • #745813
      Irishtown
      Participant

      It’s horrible! To sloppy. Its like they were trying to make a statement but made too many little mistakes that when all put together just throws the whole design off. Thats awful!

      Thanks for the photos, JJ.

    • #745814
      Paul Clerkin
      Keymaster

      That’s so disappointing – I saw plans of the design originally and it looked like it could be quite good – that isn’t.

    • #745815
      Irishtown
      Participant

      Can anyone post a picture of the original design?

    • #745816
      JJ
      Participant

      This is one I downloaded a long time ago from the old Luas/RPA web site. The new sites have far less photos and information.

      You can see from this image that the traffic island has been changed. There was a line of trees with a bus pull in behind but on site they have just widened Amiens Street.

      The canopy structure seems to have a lattice and the supports are in a different location.

      JJ

    • #745817
      bigjoe
      Participant

      Driving down Abbey Street this morning and just outside the Peacock theatre the chaps were digging a little trench across both tracks. This part is nicely bricked tiled so it will be interesting to see what state they leave it.

    • #745818
      GrahamH
      Participant

      This side of the station is a mess as it is without this clunky cluttered addition. It doesn’t integrate into the area, and less still to the station. An opportunity lost, following in the footsteps of the terminal. Those sail yokes have a tendancy to get very grubby if not maintained too, so going by IE’s record they may end up looking even worse.
      And just on this part of Connolly, think someone’s said it before but the 90s grey block that attaches itself to the right-hand side of the 1840s facade has to be the most insensitive not to mention ugliest and grottiest addition to any old building in the city. It is a disgrace, esp when seen from the ped crossing at Talbot St.
      And the old facade is still in dire need of a proper restoration, perhaps it will be carried out with this project or soon after.

    • #745819
      d_d_dallas
      Participant

      On a simlar note from the Examiner today:

      **Greens reiterate call for integration of LUAS tram lines :: latest

      The Green Party has reiterated its call for the two LUAS tram lines in Dublin to be linked.

      Party spokesman Ciaran Cuffe said the €100m cost of linking the two lines would be a small price to pay for an integrated tram system.

      “I don’t think it’s too late and I think it would give fantastic benefits to a lot of people,” he said.

      Mr Cuffe was speaking following the official opening of the Red Line between Tallaght and Connolly Station this morning.**

      Eh – correct me if I’m wrong – but aren’t these two lines built to a different standard, thus integration near impossible?

    • #745820
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      I thought that Frank McDonald had said, in a recent article, that the rumour that the lines were of a different standard was a myth and in actual fact they were the same.

    • #745821
      GrahamH
      Participant

      Why would they be a different standard?

      The newly opened ‘cave’ underneath Connolly looks fantastic with the stone clad walls – so unusual. The stone of the infamous disputed boundary wall looks equally good.

    • #745822
      notjim
      Participant

      so isn’t the point just that the green line from the canal south has better clearance so as to allow it to be upgraded to a metro, so, there is no problem with integrating the two luas lines as luas lines but it wouldn’t be easy, nor of course sensible, to convert the red line to a metro.

    • #745823
      JJ
      Participant

      Quite Right notjim.

      The gauge of both Luas Lines is the same and its possible to run the 40m trams on both lines with no difficulty. The tracks on the green line are spaced wider apart to allow for wider bodied vehicles passing each other( means the platform edges may need to be shaved back or else the body of the tram at the base can be narrowed with a wider section above). Some Hannover trams are built like this allowing the same platform width but a wider body above providing more seating room.

      Had a run on the line today. Disapponted to see the station at Connolly not fully open yet and ticket machines not giving sample tickets as with Green Line launch but overall looks like a good service.

      JJ

    • #745824
      Anonymous
      Participant

      Good man Ciaran,

      Why are the Greens the only party with any realistic public transport policy in the current opposition?

      The Luas E.I.S. written 1997 it makes me sick every time I look at it at the base of the Tailors Hall stairs.

      This proposal makes perfect sense and doesn’t cost 2.4bn

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