Rory W

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  • in reply to: Cow Parade #734684
    Rory W
    Participant

    The company I work for was going to sponsor a cow but decided against it due to concerns that it would get vandalised…

    I wouldn’t say that we have a disproportionate amount of scum, more that we have a vast amount of selfish idiots with no civic pride whatsoever. With whom nothing is ever done. If you made them clean the streets etc rather than just fining them….

    in reply to: iveagh market #734553
    Rory W
    Participant

    Just thinking of the huge markets of the Ramblas in Barcelona (whose name escapes me) – would be fantastic in Dublin.

    But then again, when we have a population who are more concerned with how long their weight-wacthers meal will take to microwave before they sit on their arses in front of EastEnders than good fresh food, would the markets be a waste?

    in reply to: The Spike #722320
    Rory W
    Participant

    As requested….

    Does the Spire miss the point after a change to the design?

    The newly-lit Spire of Dublin does not quite deliver all that was promised in 1998, writes Frank McDonald, Environment Editor.

    What’s the point? That was a common reaction to Dublin’s Spire when a model of the soaring stainless steel needle for O’Connell Street was first unveiled in November 1998. Some people still hold this view today, six months after it was finally erected.

    But the real question about the Spire ought to be “Where’s the point?” Because it was meant to taper to a pinnacle of cast optical glass, half-a-metre high, above 12 metres of perforated stainless steel through which light would be diffused from an uplighter within the structure.

    As depicted at the time, this beacon was to emit a soft light, like the halo of a candle flame. Instead, not only is the light harshly white, but the Spire is topped by an even brighter aircraft warning light, held in place by a clasp above the tapering cone and separated from it. In other words, it does not come to a point at all. Yet the environmental impact statement (EIS) on the project, published in June 2000, clearly states: “The top 0.5 metres of the monument will be made of cast optical glass”, faceted to “make the tip refract and reflect sunlight.” Furthermore, the EIS stated baldly that “there will be no aircraft warning light fixed to the top of the monument”, as the architect – Mr Ian Ritchie – had “opted for the more sensitive specification of an apex constantly illuminated by luminaries within” as well as external floodlighting.

    “This approach has been approved by the Irish Aviation Authority”, it said.

    Yet the authority had stated in 1998, when Mr Ritchie’s scheme was short-listed in the design competition, that it did not see the need for an aircraft warning system, but subsequently changed its mind.

    A spokeswoman said yesterday that, under 1994 regulations, anything higher than 90 metres “constitutes an obstacle to aviation and requires to be lit”. But she added that the authority had accepted the architectural lighting solution and did not insist on a separate light on top.

    Despite the fact that O’Connell Street is not on any known flight path, the authority maintains that some aviation warning system is needed in the interest of safety – if only to protect the Garda helicopter, which has been particularly active in the city centre at night-time in recent weeks.

    However, the bulge of the clasp holding the white aircraft warning light is clearly visible during daylight hours. At night, it becomes invisible, but the fact that it is physically separated from the architectural lighting within makes what was meant to be a pointed pinnacle look disjointed.

    Instead of an internal light projecting its beam upwards to be diffused through some 11,300 perforations near the top, a much more powerful lighting rig has been installed within the perforated section of the spire. This would account for the harshness of the light it emits.

    Mr Jim Barrett, the city architect, said yesterday that the original lighting scheme didn’t work and had to be redesigned, though he agreed that the aircraft warning light on top is “too strong”. But he added that there was a control mechanism to regulate the intensity of the lighting.

    The upper part of the spire, above the glossier section near ground level, also looks somewhat weather-beaten after just six months.

    This rather undermines early claims that the stainless steel would be “self-cleaning” and suggests that it will need to be cleaned every so often.

    But though duller than it looked last January, the spire can still become a dazzling “blade of light” on sunny days, as Mr Tim Brick, deputy city engineer, observed yesterday.

    It had also achieved its primary objective of making a powerful urban design statement in O’Connell Street.

    in reply to: Talbot Street, Dublin #736218
    Rory W
    Participant

    Is there anything on Talbot Streetworth keeping – nothing leaps to mind at the moment.

    At the railway end if you are heading north on the Train you can saee the vast areas that are being redeveloped down that end of the street. More of the same please

    in reply to: dublin docks #732235
    Rory W
    Participant

    Surely they are both state entities so we all own it

    in reply to: newspapers on dublin architecture only #734536
    Rory W
    Participant

    I find the best is the Irish Times Commercial Property (Wednesday) although there is not much in it at the moment because it’s summer

    in reply to: dublin docks #732231
    Rory W
    Participant

    Suddenly remembered that the ramp was to go as part of the original customs house scheme as “it acts as a barrier, both physically and psycologically” – if I remember my prospectus right

    in reply to: O’ Connell Street, Dublin #727879
    Rory W
    Participant

    I don’t know wheter this is a coincidence or not, but two large infformation boards have gone up on the hordings in the middle of the street…

    in reply to: dublin docks #732229
    Rory W
    Participant

    Absolutely. If the city centre was a more inviting place (clean, a lot less traffic, pedestrian friendly, greener, less winos/pissheads) then all these efforts would seem worthwhile

    in reply to: Metro #731783
    Rory W
    Participant

    Brian – you’re not getting away from the fact that these lines run onto the Belfast and Sligo lines so if there is any bottleneck it wont be avoided by building a new station at Spencer Dock. The answer to Dublin’s woes is to upgrade the signalling so that more trains can run safely on these lines.

    As for your point about the “Connolly sheds being needed for storage” – my simple answer is why? There are sidings and a depot the other side of the sheds so if a train is out of service why not put it there?

    I agree with platform 11 on these things about having an interconnector between Connoly and Heuston utilising the Phoenix park tunnel and under utilised platform 1 at Connolly. Spencer Dock in a lot of peoples minds is as far away from the centre of town as Heuston so why now replicate the facities there.

    As for Frank McD, I agree with him on a lot of things, disagree on others and Christ never lived in Temple Bar

    So I guess it still isn’t the answer

    in reply to: O’ Connell Street, Dublin #727875
    Rory W
    Participant

    The words “an Irish solution” leap to mind…

    in reply to: Removal of Street Furniture #726425
    Rory W
    Participant

    Yes that wax is lovely stuff, great to sit on and even better when it gets ground into your clothes – thanks skater-dude

    in reply to: Nine Arches Bridge (LUAS) #732182
    Rory W
    Participant

    How is Andrews a nation “builder” when he is mainly remembered for buggering up the nations railways.

    I think Kevin Myers must have seen this show hence his “lets close the railways and turn them into QBCs based on my own spurious economic theory” article

    in reply to: ILAC centre #731948
    Rory W
    Participant

    May I recommend reading the “Destruction of Dublin” by Frank McDonald.

    in reply to: Metro #731780
    Rory W
    Participant

    All very well and good but those six tracks run onto the sligo line and the Dart/Northern line so you would be just replicating the (underutilised) facilities at Connolly anyway.

    A better soluion is to make greater use of the Car Park area next to Connolly if you want more platforms

    So I guess it aint the answer.

    in reply to: dublin docks #732227
    Rory W
    Participant

    The DDDA dont have a clue what to do with Georges dock – the pontoon based business died on its arse, what makes them think that an underwater stage is foing to be any better (not that anyone takes any notice of the lunchtime Jazz in the IFSC either!!)

    in reply to: The Spike #722309
    Rory W
    Participant

    Its photosensitive so the darker it gets the brighter it shines

    in reply to: Metro #731775
    Rory W
    Participant

    Now thats just plain silly – I assume Myers is just taking the piss as usual. Just because there is no direct rail link to Ballymore Eustace…

    in reply to: m50 and our motorways #731642
    Rory W
    Participant

    Mmmm spagetti

    Amazing how every piece of infrastructure buiilt in this country has to be fixed after a few years. There is such a short term view of things – get it in at a reasonable budget and sure if it doesn’t work we’ll fix it at a later date.

    Bet you anything the junctions on the final section are going to be done in the cheap and cheerful manner of the rest only to be done properly a few years down the line.

    in reply to: Metro #731770
    Rory W
    Participant

    Is Dublin the only EU capital without a Metro system? Surely what is good for the rest of civilisation is good for us. I think that there should be heavy rail as well, but thats another story

Viewing 20 posts - 541 through 560 (of 1,046 total)