Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Plans for Large Park in Cork

Options
  • 30-09-2009 9:41pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 101 ✭✭


    City to pay €10m to society for grounds

    By Eoin English
    Wednesday, September 30, 2009

    A CITY has agreed to pay €10 million in compensation to the Munster Agricultural Society (MAS) to acquire its historic Showgrounds home in Cork.

    The payment is a quarter of what the society had sought. But an MAS spokesperson described it as "a win win situation for all involved".

    A report on the terms and conditions of the deal is being prepared for city councillors.

    It will be presented to them within the next two weeks before it can be signed off.

    The compensation deal paves the way for the creation of a massive public park which city officials say will be as important to Cork as the Phoenix Park is to Dublin.

    It will also facilitate the GAA’s plans to expand Páirc Uí Chaoimh.

    The proposed park is a key element of the city’s multi-billion Docklands regeneration project.

    The compensation deal was finally agreed late last week almost two years after a Compulsory Purchase Order (CPO) on 10 hectares in the docklands was cleared.

    Cork City Council began the CPO process in 2006. It moved to acquire five separate sites around Páirc Uí Chaoimh totalling 10 hectares — the largest of which is the 8.7 hectare Showgrounds land in Ballintemple.

    Following an oral hearing in November 2006, An Bord Pleanála confirmed the CPO in early 2007.

    A notice to treat was served on the MAS in June 2007, but following the failure of either side to agree a compensation payment, an arbitration process was initiated.

    That hearing took place last May and was told the society was seeking up to €42 million in compensation.

    MAS’s legal representative said the MAS had leased the Showgrounds, which hosted agricultural shows and other events, from the council since 1892 and had 75 years left on its lease.

    He said the charitable organisation was entitled to compensation under two possible headings based on:

    * the market valuation of the Showgrounds site, estimated at €42m;

    * or the "equivalent re-instatement" cost — the cost of building a similar facility elsewhere — estimated at more than €39m.

    Mr Holland said the society was seeking the higher of whichever of the two amounts is chosen following arbitration.

    "The future of the Munster Agriculture Society is at stake in these proceedings," he said at the time.

    Meanwhile, it has emerged that a substantial amount of non-hazardous waste has been found buried on the Showgrounds site.

    The city’s Environment Directorate is investigating the matter and talks to resolve the issue are ongoing.

    This story appeared in the printed version of the Irish Examiner Wednesday, September 30, 2009

    Very interesting piece, i hadnt heard anything about a big park being part of the docklands redevelopment. does anyone know if there are plans released of it? id love to get a look at em. if its anything at all like the phoenix park it would be great for cork. also, very sketchy how they were looking for upwards of €40M and settled for €10M, and then the reported throws in the bit about illegal waste?


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 5,002 ✭✭✭opus


    Sadly think it will a long time 'til we see anything happening with the docklands if this article is correct :(
    Cork Docklands project swept down River Lee!

    AH, dearie me! The two billion euro plan to build a town the size of Kilkenny in the dockland area of Cork has been swept down the swanee, or to be more precise, down the Lee. It turned out to be a shadow without substance, an optical illusion, and of such stuff as dreams are made of!

    The Docklands project was to be one of the biggest high-density urban developments in Ireland, housing 20,000 residents and employing 25,000 people.

    Tower blocks situated on the Centre Park Road, Kennedy Road and the South Docklands Quay-side were intended to change the city skyline and surpass Dublin. Cork would become one of the most attractive locations for investment in Europe. At least, that’s what the developers said.

    Planners, politicos and property tycoons salivated at the thought of constructing offices, hotels, shops, apartments, a university, a Sydney Harbour-style cultural centre, leisure facilities, parks, public spaces, pedestrian routes, a new marina, and a public transport system that included a railway, a railway station and a bus station. Oh, and two new bridges were to link the city to the docklands area.

    More...


  • Site Banned Posts: 5,904 ✭✭✭parsi


    There were also plans for a bus route, schools and creches in the area.

    However like the Mahon Point Conference Centre these were probably inserted in order to swing PP and then be quietly dropped and we'll be left with a desolate wasteland of unfilled apartments, empty retail units and a cold breeze blowing off the Lee.


Advertisement