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'We basically can’t walk safely into town': The state of Ireland's footpaths and walkways

Investment in cycling and walking is increasing – but campaigners say change isn’t happening quick enough.

WHEN FIOLA FOLEY was on maternity leave earlier this year she would regularly take her child out for a walk in the pram.

Foley lives in Dunmaniheen, Co Kerry, about a kilometre outside of Killorglin. But to walk to Killorglin – a busy tourist town on the Ring of Kerry – she has to use about 250 metres of road with no proper footpath.

In April, Foley shared a video on Twitter depicting what she had to deal with daily. In the video, two large articulated trucks speed by Foley and her sleeping child, followed by a number of other vehicles. 

She walks along a narrow hard shoulder with bushes growing over a wall onto the roadway. There is a broken white line in the centre of the road, meaning vehicles can legally overtake. The speed limit is 80 km/h.

“We basically can’t walk safely into town,” Foley tells The Journal.

“In our case, we have to walk this 250 metre stretch to get to the footpath and it is treacherous.”

The road in question is the N72. When Foley brought the issue to the attention of Kerry County Council, she was told that the road is due a significant upgrade, which will solve the issue.

A spokesperson for the council told us that the road is scheduled for “a very substantial multi-million euro upgrade and realignment and has recently gone through public consultation”.

But Foley says this upgrade will take years to complete, and in the meantime the road will remain unsafe for anyone who wants to walk the short stretch into town.

“I still have this dream of being able to walk [my daughter] to school or cycle, but I won’t do that as long as there is no footpath. 

“We’ll be driving the 2km to school, getting stuck in traffic with all the others on the way.”

Footpaths and inadequate access

A lack of proper pedestrian infrastructure is often cited as a barrier, preventing people from taking active travel journeys (walking or cycling) in towns and cities and rural areas across Ireland. 

The specific issues differ from location to location. But in general, local councillors, residents and campaigners highlight a lack of footpaths and pedestrian walkways in areas, footpaths that are in need of repair, or frequent obstructions that prohibit safe and enjoyable walking.

According to the CSO’s 2019 National Travel Survey, over one fifth of people over the age of 18 in Ireland said they never take a journey by foot. Over one third of people said they would walk more in the future if there was a safer walking environment, while 20% said they would walk more if there was better infrastructure (like improved footpaths).

Earlier CSO figures show that half of all trips in Ireland under 2km in distance are driven, while two thirds of all trips between 2km and 4km are driven. 

Speaking in 2019 to the Oireachtas Climate Action Committee, Dr Rachel Aldred, Professor of Transport at the University of Westminster, stated that there is a pressing need for a change in how people travel in order for Ireland to reduce its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

“There is a need for change. When we think about emissions reductions, technological change alone will not be enough to meet policy goals over the short timeframes necessary,” Aldred said.

We need that technological change but we also need substantial behaviour change, that is, cleaner vehicles but also fewer vehicles.

Bad state of repair

While badly maintained footpaths affect everyone negatively, they have a disproportionate impact on older people, disabled people, and people wheeling children in prams.

A 2015 report by Age Friendly Ireland and the Centre for Excellence in Universal Design at the National Disability Authority examined walkability in eight Irish towns. The report found that 80% of people said there were footpaths available. However, over 70% of people said footpaths were in a bad state of repair.

Some of the main issues listed were that footpaths were too narrow, were not ramped or easy to negotiate for older or disabled people, and that they were often blocked by illegal parking. 

Nicola McDonnell, from Drogehda, Co Louth, has been a wheelchair user since 2010 after she suffered a bad accident. She frequently highlights issues with the town’s footpaths. 

McDonnell works with the Irish Wheelchair Association (IWA) as a team leader and advocates on behalf of disabled people. In 2013, she and others set up an access group to push for improvements to footpaths and disability access in the town.

“Some of the footpaths are lethal in Drogheda,” McDonnell tells the The Journal.

“You’d have footpaths that are cracked and are just so dangerous, and others that are uneven. And others for people with visual impairment that wouldn’t be up to standard.”

McDonnell says that she is not able to reach her local shop as the footpath isn’t adequate. However Louth County Council has recently begun works to improve the footpath in question.

Finally, as well as walkways being in disrepair, she says that people illegally parking on footpaths and blocking the way is a huge issue in the town.

“People just parking where they want to and blocking where they want to. That’s a big thing in Drogheda, even outside my own workplace, and especially in the evening time,” she says.

In general, McDonnell says that things are “improving a bit” in the town, and that campaigners have a great relationship with Louth County Council, who she says listens to their concerns. 

Recently the access group gave a list of 20 locations in Drogheda to the council that needed to be dealt with. However, there are still many issues to be addressed, she says.

There is still a lot that needs to be done and I don’t know that we will ever get there.

Cities 

Many of the problems in Drogheda are present in bigger towns and cities in the country. Parking on footpaths, obstructions and inadequate space for pedestrians are issues frequently raised in Dublin.

Lauren Tuite lives in Inchicore and is a founder of the social enterprise D8 Development. She is completing a Masters in Sustainable Transport & Mobility at TU Dublin, and advocates for improved walkways for pedestrians. 

D8 Development turns vacant properties in the city into spaces where people can live and work. Through her work with D8, Tuite sees the negative impact an overemphasis on vehicle traffic can have.

“We really see the impact that prioritising traffic has for the livability and viability of places like inchicore, where the vast majority of road space has been given over to traffic, people passing through,” says Tuite.

“There is a large community here that needs to be prioritised. We’ve been funnelling cars as quickly as possible through what was a village to get to the city centre and that has an impact on opening businesses in Inchicore and living in inchicore.

“It really undermines your quality of life and your ability to walk among your community and raise your children here.”

Tuite is a mother to a three-year-old, which opened her eyes to how difficult it can be for people to navigate uneven and blocked pavements in the city.

I consider it a social justice issue. I feel like everyone in Ireland should be able to go for a walk – and the experience should be enjoyable.

Prioritising pedestrians over cars, properly enforcing illegal parking, more ‘Stop’ signs being erected at junctions, and ensuring footpaths are big enough for couples and families to walk safely side by side, are some of the solutions she puts forward for improving walkability.

“It’s all about making the car the least attractive option, and making walking the most attractive option,” she says.

Tuite says this will improve public health, as more people become more active, reduce emissions, as fewer people travel by car, and ensure areas like Inchicore become better places to live.

What’s being done

The 2020 Programme for Government commits 10% of the total capital budget for travel towards pedestrian infrastructure. Budget 2021 committed €360 million per year of the capital budget to go towards cycling and walking projects.

So far this year, the National Transport Authority (NTA) has announced €310 million in funding for sustainable transport projects in cities, towns and villages across the country, including major walkway improvements. 

But for campaigners across the country, there still remains much to be done to improve footpaths and accessibility for pedestrians.

For Fiola Foley outside Killorglin, it will likely be years before the road into the town is improved and a proper footpath is added. In the meantime, she has asked the council to clean the area around the hard shoulder, paint a continuous white line on the road to prevent overtaking, and to ensure speed limits are properly monitored.

“There are up to 600 residents in the nearby area and there’s no way for us to leave our houses on foot without taking a huge risk, mixing with traffic, articulated lorries and risking our lives,” she says.

A spokesperson for the council told The Journal:

“The Council continues to liaise with the residents in relation to any issues of concern but all of these issues will be addressed within the wider enhancement project.”

This work is co-funded by Journal Media and a grant programme from the European Parliament. Any opinions or conclusions expressed in this work is the author’s own. The European Parliament has no involvement in nor responsibility for the editorial content published by the project. For more information, see here

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37 Comments
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    Mute Barry Somers
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    Aug 15th 2021, 7:43 AM

    One of the biggest issues with footpaths in Ireland is the level of inconsiderate and dangerous motorists that park on them.

    Not only does this endanger mobility impaired, elderly and children but the excess weight from parked cars and trucks seriously damages footpaths that should otherwise last for decades.

    The problem most councils don’t care about the illegal parking and neither do the gardai.

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    Mute der Fussballmeister
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    Aug 15th 2021, 8:58 AM

    @Barry Somers: The Galway Co. Council spent a fortune in removing all the poles from Bishop Street in Tuam to make pedestrian access easier, all they really did was enlarge the car park opposite the fast food takeaway.

    35
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    Mute Pirates of Ireland
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:01 AM

    @Barry Somers: They just put the hazard lights on and they think it’s all ok! Pity the guards can’t do anything about it

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    Mute Sam McCormack
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    Aug 15th 2021, 10:44 AM

    @Pirates of Ireland: The Gardaí *can* do something about it. It’s an offence under the Road Traffic Act to park either wholly or partly on a footpath.

    However, they mostly choose not to & instead ignore it.

    34
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    Mute DB
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    Aug 15th 2021, 4:11 PM

    @Barry Somers: get over it Sommers you tree hugger , make enough car parks problem solved don’t make it a motorist issue

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Aug 15th 2021, 8:16 AM

    Why isn’t Local Property Tax used to maintain those footpaths? That is why it was introduced, right?

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    Mute Robert Breen
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    Aug 15th 2021, 8:36 AM

    @David Corrigan: that’s true and Car Tax was specifically set up for road maintenance but now just goes into one big central coffer and spent on all sorts of things

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    Mute Gerard Heery
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:40 AM

    @David Corrigan: the welfare bill is to big in Ireland that’s why

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    Mute Gerard Heery
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:40 AM

    @David Corrigan: the welfare bill is to big in Ireland

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    Mute Robert Breen
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    Aug 15th 2021, 10:04 AM

    @Gerard Heery: but with people having accidents on the roads, the welfare bill will be even higher!

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    Mute Gerard Smith
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    Aug 15th 2021, 12:17 PM

    @Gerard Heery: its not the welfare bill. Stop swallowing the rubbish that government feed you. Its the public sector bill that is out of control combined with a kamikaze approach to funding public works.

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    Mute Shea Carroll
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    Aug 15th 2021, 7:54 AM

    I have complained time & again about parking on the footpath at Kilmainham Cross roads. Illegally parked cars forcing pedestrians ,people with buggies and wheelchair users out on to a very busy road in order to go around the corner. I personally witnessed a young visually impaired woman walk straight into a parked car & injure herself. I emailed DCC & every TD & Councillor for the area. The answer I got was “DCC are aware of the situation and are monitoring it on a regular basis”. In the meantime call the clampers. It just ot good enough. It will take serious injury or a death before DCC act on this matter. In the meantime I notice our local Guards stepping out on to the road turning the corner while chatting to each other oblivious to the Illegally parked cars.

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    Mute Brian Dunne
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    Aug 15th 2021, 7:51 AM

    Added to the poor quality of paths and walkways is the amount of people who do not clean up after their dogs. Absolutely disgusting and selfish behaviour. And worse still is that there seems to be little or no consequences for not doing so.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Aug 15th 2021, 4:33 PM

    @Brian Dunne: Most people do now – what surprised me was the number of childish people throwing their used face mask on the ground, the second that they leave a shop. Grown adults walking past a litter bin to throw their rubbish on the ground.

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    Mute john smith iv
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:03 AM

    In the Fiona Foley case, that road is indeed dangerous and doesn’t have a footpath. However I don’t think we can put footpaths on the edge of every two lane country or national road, just because somebody chooses to live out there rather than in the village they are from. Any resizing of that road would destroy the hedges and trees at the perimeter.

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    Mute john doe
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    Aug 15th 2021, 11:53 AM

    @john smith iv: loose planning around ribbon development has a lot to answer for

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    Mute Niall Ó Cofaigh
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    Aug 15th 2021, 1:16 PM

    @john smith iv: I agree, there must be a million miles of road with no footpath all over the country. It would not be possible to put footpaths on all of them which is not really helpful to the people affected. Maybe we should look, in some instances, of a separate walk and cycle way, like on the other side of the hedge, or not even following the roadways. This would be safer for all where practical.

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    Mute Derek Moean
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    Aug 15th 2021, 8:25 AM

    The pepole in power couldn’t care less about the footpaths thay are in Government for the money and the pension. So pepole of Ireland don’t moan keep voting them in and make them rich….

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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    Aug 15th 2021, 8:15 AM

    “The state of Ireland’s footpaths and walkways” yet the picture shows a road.

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    Mute Maria Quinn
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:08 AM

    @sean o’dhubhghaill: It might be the point … not footpath in that road !
    Once upon time the roads were only the carriageways. In civil engineering road is the whole

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    Mute David Dineen
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:21 AM

    Now apply a wheelchair and that’s why so many disabled people stay at home

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Aug 15th 2021, 4:43 PM

    @David Dineen: It’s not pleasant to visit Ireland either if a person is disabled. I know a few visitors who were delayed many times a day by a lack of facilities for disabled people.

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    Mute wholetthedogsout
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:34 AM

    Why is it so hard to do the easiest thing right in this country. Planning in county councils have a lot to answer for. They grant massive building projects before getting infrastructure ready first. I live with in a 15-20 min walk to a train station but would be killed at some stage getting there as its along a winding narrow 2 lane old country road that is used as a rat run, with no enforcement on speeding. I an my neighbours have highlighted it on several occasions but have had no joy. But they are still building hundreads of houses on said road and still no footpath to the nearest village.

    34
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    Mute Maria Quinn
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:00 AM

    Pedestrians has gotten nothing but unsafe new infrastructure. The new passive mobility devices are all over the footpaths from parking ranks to travelling. You can’t even enjoy a walk in exclusive areas for pedestrians without a cyclist bullying you for the space, because you know, cyclists are vulnerable and it is so hard to stop and start again, it is so hard to walk while pulling the bikes.

    The article mentions nothing about the increase issues caused by cycling and all those new PASSIVE mobility things

    For instance in dlr the council removed disable parking bays to provide with an ample footpaths to the pedestrian. The council said -oh they can park in the near by shopping parking (paid) – - we want to provide ample space for pedestrians-
    Now there are parking ranks for cargo bicycles (passive mobility) … well if the near by shopping parking is good for people with limited mobility, it should be good for fit healthy and wealthy people, the cargo bicycles are pretty expensive, some cost more than electrical cars.

    Stop to put in the same bag pedestrians and cyclists, and stop the sob stories to get nothing to pedestrians or children or active mobility

    Most users had got passive mobility vehicles, electrical, they don’t respect the pedestrians spaces neither the street spaces for people with special mobility needs. They don’t want the windmills farm in their neighbourhoods, councils. They want them elsewhere where they wouldn’t see them every day to remind them the impact in the environment of their electrical mobility devices

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    Mute Barry Somers
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    Aug 15th 2021, 10:56 AM

    @Maria Quinn: was wondering who would turn this into a anti cyclist rant. You are totally missing the bigger picture

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    Mute Gary Kearney
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    Aug 15th 2021, 11:26 AM

    @Barry Somers: The point was well made and you say it is a rant, the person ranting is you. Cyclists do cause problems for vulnerable pedestrians.
    Fact.

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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    Aug 15th 2021, 3:44 PM

    @Gary Kearney: How?

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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    Aug 15th 2021, 3:46 PM

    @sean o’dhubhghaill: How many pedestrians are killed/injured by cyclists? How many pedestrians are killed/injured by motorists?

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    Mute Sean O'Murchu
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    Aug 15th 2021, 10:46 AM

    A footpath was removed just outside Cahersiveen in order to widen the road! This being the road to the local beaches and outdoor facilities.

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    Mute Ross Mc Gann
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    Aug 15th 2021, 9:42 AM

    Us people loving rural sitting here like….. eah, you guys get foot paths :O

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    Mute Niall Dunleavy
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    Aug 15th 2021, 12:13 PM

    ” We can’t put footpaths on some roads” Why not?
    There’s a 20 ft wide stretch of road there. We need to adjust our viewpoint. We are all road users. No one group has a priority over another.

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    Mute Gary Kearney
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    Aug 15th 2021, 11:29 AM

    Well I hope all the posters support the Disability Federation of Irelands #MakeWayDay campaign on September 24th @MakeWayDay or https://www.makewayday.com/
    The disability community and the vulnerable pedestrian community have been working on this issue for years.

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    Mute Larry Rawson
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    Aug 15th 2021, 7:39 AM

    The Rocky Road to Dublin is nearly a Pointless Landmark in itself………

    10
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    Mute Pat Crowley Snr
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    Aug 15th 2021, 4:06 PM

    Too many cyclists of all ages on paths, even where there are cycle lanes.

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    Mute Shelley Keary
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    Aug 15th 2021, 2:04 PM

    If @limerickcitycouncil would please, please remove glass from the pathways around the bus stop areas alongside the Hurler’s pub – it would make life a bit less hazardous. In order to prevent the glass cutting the paws off their dogs, walkers need to step out onto a busy main road. Houses along the stretch seem to be rented and the residents aren’t bothered

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    Mute Martin Sinnott
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    Aug 15th 2021, 4:15 PM

    Brennanstown road in Foxrock has no footpath for about 100meters approx

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    Mute Daniel Kevin Sullivan
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    Aug 16th 2021, 5:21 PM

    If you look at the other main roads in and out of the town of Killorglin either towards Tralee or heading west along the Ring of Kerry road you will see quite extensive widening and footpaths. There was a public consultation meeting within the last 12 months on the planned upgrade of the Killarney road to include footpath and cyclepath out as far as the new RDI building which is about 2 km out the road. There’s been considerable progress in this area over the last number of years.

    The Killarney road has had quite a bit of ribbon development on it, indeed there’s a large holiday home development at the specific location cited at the start of the post. There was nothing to stop those developing the holiday homes to build a path into the town. And there’s plenty of unoccupied houses right in the town centre that could be lived in.

    Instead what has happened over decades is that people who had the money to do so built housing away from the town itself and to be away from everyone else and now they want the town to come to them and for the cost of that to be funded by those they were moving away from.

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