The numbers spiked after a new cohort of councillors was elected in June 2024, and have eased somewhat since then – while ...
The tally of Manna’s active drone delivery sites across Dublin at last year’s end stands in contrast to the company’s past ...
At the Cast Foundry, Antoine Daure is working on his series Trap, aiming to create 10 to 15 variants for a future exhibition.
Fingal County Council has proposed rezoning 61.5ha across 11 sites in north Dublin – with room, if developed, for 2,500 homes ...
Hopefully it’ll create something like a musical bridge between Ireland and Japan in some way, says Emmy Shigeta, whose lyrics ...
You can’t be sad in the sunflowers,” says Andrea Arroyave, gesturing to three versions of intricate beaded earrings, the same ...
Sláintecare, the HSE’s plan for reforming the national health and social care system, places considerable importance on ...
Dublin Inquirer is an independent, primarily subscriber-funded newspaper serving Ireland's capital since 2015, publishing Wednesdays and Fridays online, and in print monthly.
Donal Fallon is a historian, writer and broadcaster based in Dublin. His work has appeared in History Ireland, Spiked, Jacobin and other outlets. He is editor of the Dublin history blog Come Here To M ...
The signs of an ambitious effort to build out Dublin city’s network of cycle routes are everywhere. There are dashed white lines, rusty-red cycle tracks, bollards and bollards and bollards – and the ...
On a recent cloudy Wednesday evening, Shannon Chance, a professor of architectural engineering at Technological University Dublin (TUD) was recalling her immigration woes. Chance is from the American ...
When photographing houses in Killester built for soldiers and sailors returning from the First World War, Ruth McManus stumbled upon a question that she couldn’t answer. She was looking for houses ...
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