Dublin Inquirer is an independent, primarily subscriber-funded newspaper serving Ireland's capital since 2015, publishing Wednesdays and Fridays online, and in print monthly.
The expected timeline is the 18 months plus the breaks over the summer and winter months, said Shane McMorrow, at a recent ...
Its story reads like a cheap pastiche of Edgar Allan Poe, a century-long streak of tragedy and misfortune, ending in a fire ...
For years, some councillors have been pushing for more parking enforcement outside the city centre – in places like the northern suburbs. Now, the council is moving to award a new parking-enforcement ...
Dublin. Characters. Ranelagh. There were his birth parents again, a fresh mention. This time, coming from Jess Lynch, the ...
Most of the small businesses on the block bounded by South Richmond Street, Harcourt Road, and Charlemont Street have closed in the last few months. Juan Ramon Sanchez-Gil might make more reselling ...
I feel like, if I don’t vote [for it], I’m voting against housing. If I do vote, I’m voting against greenbelt.” ...
A spokesperson for the board said it redacted accounts that weren’t “evidence-based” and had not tried to “hide or trivialise ...
We know there are issues,” said Dublin City Council Assistant Chief Executive Mick Mulhern, at a recent housing committee ...
Some residents in the north inner-city are worried about how the new line will impact them, as their homes are very close to ...
In 2024, 29 percent of housing applications to councils across the country – for 5,626 households – were closed due to the ...
For me, he looks every inch a Soundcloud star; maybe even a throwback to a decade-and-a-half-old blog rap. This Jobstown boho ...