Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts

Monday 18 December 2006

Travel & Tourism

Preliminary talks have taken place between officials of Cork City Council and the Railway Procurement Agency with a view to establishing a light rail system for the city. A feasibility study is to be carried out on the project, which would be completed in three phases beginning with a line from Ballincollig to Blackrock and Mahon; a feasibility study has already commenced on a water bus service for the River Lee.

If there is no multilateral deal between the EU and the US within the next few weeks Minister for Transport Martin Cullen has said the Government will look for a bilateral agreement with Washington. The Minister will await the outcome of a January meeting between the EU and the US on the "open skies" policy. The Government is anxious to negotiate additional US destinations for Aer Lingus.

When the Dublin Port Tunnel opens on Wednesday access will be confined to trucks. The authorities want to assess the impact of the change to existing traffic flows. A review will take place in mid-January and cars may then be allowed to use it.

Monday 11 December 2006

Travel & Tourism

  • Preliminary figures released by Tourism Ireland reveal that a record 8.8 million people will have visited the island of Ireland by the end of the year, an increase of 8.5%. The majority, some five million, came from Britain but the 2.3 million visitors from mainland Europe was an increase of 17%. An 11% jump in the numbers coming from North America brought that total up to 1.1 million, breaking the one million barrier for the first time since 2000. Some 7.4 million visited the Republic while the North had 1.8 million visitors. Just 4.1 million of the total came here on holiday.
  • Minister for Transport Martin Cullen officially opened a new section of the M6 between Kinnegad and Tyrrellspass in Co. Westmeath, on Tuesday. The new 19km stretch of road is part of the Dublin-Galway motorway, and the next section to Kilbeggan is due to open next year, with Athlone to be added in 2008. Travellers to Galway from Shannon and Limerick are also expected to enjoy less stressful journeys in the near future; it is planned to open the Ennis bypass just before Christmas.
  • The Irish Times reports on a legal battle in the US with strong Irish connections. Gregory Patrick, who runs Tours of Enchantment from Houston, Texas, has launched a court appeal in New Jersey to compel Robert Greifeld, chief executive of the Nasdaq stock exchange, to pay for a party held in Luttrellstown Castle. The US businessman brought a party of 16 adults and seven children to the castle for a week-long family reunion, but he is disputing the final $70k of the total $610k for the event, claiming that he was overcharged. The fantasy holiday required the recruitment of 32 actors, four butlers, Irish dancers, and experts in falconry and archery, as well as the hire of helicopters and horse drawn carriages
  • The Dublin Port Tunnel opened yesterday for some 10,000 runners who completed a 10k charity race, by going up one tunnel and returning via the other. Traffic will start using the tunnel from December 20 but there is a fear that, by filtering all trucks from Dublin's docklands through the tunnel, traffic snarl-ups on the M50 will just get worse.