Hopefully it’ll create something like a musical bridge between Ireland and Japan in some way, says Emmy Shigeta, whose lyrics ...
The numbers spiked after a new cohort of councillors was elected in June 2024, and have eased somewhat since then – while ...
Dublin Inquirer is an independent, primarily subscriber-funded newspaper serving Ireland's capital since 2015, publishing Wednesdays and Fridays online, and in print monthly.
“It’s important that artworks come from an honest place, and this installation is my insides turned out,” writes Aoife Ward. The latest in our Curios About series on works by Dublin.
The damage from damp, and the creeping mould, are visible on Friday afternoon inside a well-kept two-bed apartment in the council’s Oliver Bond House flat complex. By the window in the bathroom, near ...
The signs of an ambitious effort to build out Dublin city’s network of cycle routes are everywhere. There are dashed white lines, rusty-red cycle tracks, bollards and bollards and bollards – and the ...
Rory Delany toyed with several titles for the congregation address. “Reflections on a Window”. Not that one. Maybe, “Two Memorials” or “An Inconvenient Truth”? Not those either. In the end, he settled ...
When a team from the south side arrived at a pitch in St Anne’s Park for a match against a Clontarf FC team recently, some of the visitors needed to use the toilet, says Aisling O’Malley. But there ...
Sinn Féin Councillor Edel Moran asked for a bit of clarity. “I’ve had a couple of residents on about the blue bags,” said Moran, at Monday’s North Central Area Committee meeting. “Do you collect them?
When photographing houses in Killester built for soldiers and sailors returning from the First World War, Ruth McManus stumbled upon a question that she couldn’t answer. She was looking for houses ...
More than 900 people in custody in prisons across Ireland are on waiting lists for addiction counsellors, show figures from the Irish Prison Service (IPS). The longest waitlist, the figures show, is ...
On Kevin Street in Dublin 8, concrete pillars prop up the second storey of an unfinished building. A sign reads: “Revealing a new office and residential campus in the city”. The Camden Yard ...