Traffic chaos could be on its way back to Dublin with the building of the proposed 18km-long Metro North railway, but its project manager claims the multi-billion-euro plan will cause minimal disruption to those living around – and above– the construction. The main contract for the stations and the drilling of the tunnel will be awarded towards the end of 2011 with most of the heavy works beginning in 2012. The target date for completion is 2016. This will be followed by a period of trial runs with passengers anticipated by early 2017.
Monday, July 12, 2010
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Metro Safe as Key road and rail projects axed
FORTY major road projects and key rail and Luas projects have been scrapped because there is no money to build them.
Nine new motorway rest areas planned for the M7 (Limerick), M8 (Cork), M9 (Waterford), M3 (Cavan) and N11 (Wexford) have also been mothballed by the Government, an Irish Independent investigation has found. The National Roads Authority (NRA) has run out of money to build the 40 roads, which include bypasses and dual carriageways.
It has been "directed" by the Government not to build the remaining rest areas along motorways, sources revealed.
The axed projects will be confirmed in a government mid-term review of the National Development Plan (NDP), which is expected to be completed within weeks.
The investigation also found:
The Government has almost halved funding for infrastructure between now and 2013, from €39.6bn to €22.9bn.
The NRA will begin just three projects next year, and all are in partnership with the private sector, with monies to be paid back over 30 years.
A series of projects under the NDP also face the axe, including several of the capital's Luas links.
The only projects considered "safe" under the NDP are Metro North, the Atlantic Corridor Road project linking Letterkenny to Waterford, and the underground DART.
Nine new motorway rest areas planned for the M7 (Limerick), M8 (Cork), M9 (Waterford), M3 (Cavan) and N11 (Wexford) have also been mothballed by the Government, an Irish Independent investigation has found. The National Roads Authority (NRA) has run out of money to build the 40 roads, which include bypasses and dual carriageways.
It has been "directed" by the Government not to build the remaining rest areas along motorways, sources revealed.
The axed projects will be confirmed in a government mid-term review of the National Development Plan (NDP), which is expected to be completed within weeks.
The investigation also found:
The Government has almost halved funding for infrastructure between now and 2013, from €39.6bn to €22.9bn.
The NRA will begin just three projects next year, and all are in partnership with the private sector, with monies to be paid back over 30 years.
A series of projects under the NDP also face the axe, including several of the capital's Luas links.
The only projects considered "safe" under the NDP are Metro North, the Atlantic Corridor Road project linking Letterkenny to Waterford, and the underground DART.
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