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 idea for this cover was an ode to the post workers, couriers and delivery drivers who just (literally) carried the ...
Andrii Stepanov says some people don’t want to return to what was once their home, and is now Russian territory. “Why are ...
The DRHE’s Homeless Action Plan talks about it, and the need to “reduce discharge planning gaps”. The action plan also aims, ...
A masterplan for the area foresees up to 8,500 homes being built on the lands, as well as schools and sports and community ...
Dublin City Council is getting ready to apply (to itself) for planning permission to build 153 social and cost-rental homes ...
They weren’t warmly received by all locals, with the Temple Bar Residents Association writing in a submission for the council ...
We have waited too long; we desperately need the department to fund this,” says Shay L’Estrange, coordinator with Ballyfermot ...
“It is a milestone to get to this point in time,” said independent Councillor John Lyons, at a meeting on Monday of councillors for the North Central Area. On the agenda was an update on long-touted ...
Customers come to Brendan’s Café from the early houses, from the flats, and from the nearby fruit and veg market for the breakfast. Inside, very little has changed since the place opened in 1985.
“I’m 40 years recording the history of Monto,” says Terry Fagan, a local historian with the North Inner City Folklore Project. “There’s very little of it left when you walk around today, but there’s ...
Emmet Hall doesn’t stand out. It’s an average red-brick building with a rolled-down metal shutter in the middle of a residential area. But according to the group behind the “Save Emmet Hall” campaign, ...
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