Gazette DUNDRUM
March 23 - 29, 2017
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Legal move may follow after land ‘sterilized’ Developers’ bid to AISLING KENNEDY combuild units thwarted ApanyDEVELOPMENT which claims its land been left “sterilized” after after councillors vote has councillors voted against trafmanagement proposals down traffic scheme ficis now considering a judicial
review that could cost rate payers thousands of euro. The traffic management scheme for the Brennanstown Road between Carrickmines and Cabinteely was voted down at the recent Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown
County Council meeting following a record 560 submissions against the proposals by local residents. The rejection, which came despite the county manager’s recommendation that the scheme be approved, will
now prevent Marlet Property Group from beginning construction work on a residential development in the area – even though the land has been zoned for residential use since 1986. Continued on Page 4
2 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 23 March 2017
MOUNT MERRION | LOCALS VOW TO FIGHT PLANNING APPLICATION
Fears as developers target Cherrygarth EMMA NOLAN THE people of Mount Merrion have been targeted by developers once again as plans for an apartment complex in Cherrygarth appeared overnight last week. The application seeks permission to construct 47 residential units on the grounds of Thornhill House in Cherrygarth. “Mount Merrion has been repeatedly targeted by developers in the last year,” said Tom Fahey, of the Mount Merrion Residents’ Association (MMRA). He added that the repeated proposals for development will have a “devastating” effect on the area. The proposal, lodged by Chartered Town Planners and Development, consists of a three- to four-stor y apar tment block comprising 37 apartments and 14 threestorey semi-detached or
No incidation of plans have been made over Thornhill House, which is on the site that developers have targeted for an apartment complex
terraced houses. The existing house on the site is the former home of hotelier and builder PV Doyle, and is currently owned by his son, David Doyle, who made the application. A Georgian mansion on 1.39 hectares, Thornhill House was originally owned by Henry Darley, brewer of Brewery Road in the mid-1800s, and by the Talbot Powers (Irish Distillers) in the early 1900s.
The site has several very mature trees and is surrounded on three sides by a 300-year-old wall. As yet, there is no indication of plans for the historic building, which hit the rental market a year ago for €7,000 per month. The house is a protected structure and the planning application contains no plans regarding the actual house at present. This site is adjacent to the Oatlands site, which
is the subject of a planning appeal to An Bord Planeala. New Generation Homes are seeking permission to construct over 60 residences on this site and that application is being opposed by the MMRA and around 60 residents. Tom Fahey said: “If both application succeed, it will result in quadrupling the current traffic exiting from Cherrygarth on to Trees Road, and this junction is already a traffic hazard at peak times. “The knock-on effects on amenities including water, sewerage and traffic and schools will affect all residents in the greater Mount Merrion area, and will have a devastating impact on residents in Cherrygarth and Trees Road.” Deputy Josepha Madigan (FG) condemned the “unprecedented level of construction” in Cherrygarth and said that it
was liable to completely alter the Mount Merrion landscape and community. She said: “Traffic is already a major problem in the area and the imposition of over a hundred new residences will only add to this. “It is not clear what effect the construction of these new residences would have on water, sewerage and education facilities in Mount Merrion. “More homes need to be constructed in Dublin, but this need must be balanced with the needs of the existing community. “Like many Mount Merrion residents, back by the MMRA, I am very concerned that this level of construction will transform the townscape and negatively affect community life.” The Gazette contacted the developers but had not received a reply by the time of going to press.
FASTNews
Detained 3.5 years without trial: Ibrahim Halawa
Fears for Ibrahim’s life as his health deteriorates
IBRAHIM Halawa’s health is deteriorating rapidly according to MEP Lynn Boylan (SF) and he is being kept alive by glucose injections. Ibrahim has been detained without trial in Egypt for more than three and a half years and he has seen his trial postponed no less than 19 times. Ms Boylan is appealing for “very direct intervention” from the Government to save Ibrahim’s life. Campaigners are very concerned that Ibrahim will not survive until his next court date. At the time of going to press, following further Cabinet discussions about Ibrahim’s plight on Tuesday, the Government has announced that it has asked the Chief Medical Officer to nominate a medical expert to given access to Ibrahim, with an independent medical expert to be sent to Egypt as a matter of extreme urgency. It is anticipated that the Egyptian authorities will grant the request made by the authorities.
Hop to it to have a fun Easter party at Hamleys HAMLEYS in Dundrum Town Centre will host a free Easter party for kids between April 14 to 21. There will be an Easter Party Room where families can take part in a variety of Easter activities, from arts and crafts, to fun-filled games, and there will also be lots of sweet treats available each day. There will also be Hamleys Bunny Bear hopping around, and kids can take a selfie with him. The Hamleys Easter Party Room is open from April 14 to 21, from 12-12.45pm, 1-1.45pm, 2-2.45pm, and 3-3.45pm. To book, see www.hamleys.com/ explore.
PBP meeting focused on the rental crisis in DLR
Council to give top civic honour to Naval Service DUN Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council has awarded the Irish Naval Service Honorary Freedom of Entry to the County. An Cathaoirleach, Cllr Cormac Devlin, said: “The Irish Defence Forces have a proud record of international human-
itarian service on behalf of the EU and UN. “Defence Forces ships, working with the Italian navy as part of Operation Pontus, have rescued more than 15,000 would-be migrants attempting to cross the Mediterranean sea.”
“The civic honour of Freedom of Entry is the highest compliment a municipality can pay a naval group. It is therefore very fitting that DLR would recognise and publicly acknowledge the heroic duties undertaken by officers and crew of the Irish naval service.”
The council will present the award to the Irish Naval Service on March 31 when Le Eithne will be visiting Dun Laoghaire Harbour. Cllr Devlin is pictured with members of the Defence Forces who recently received their International Operational Service Medals. Picture: Luke Martin
PEOPLE Before Profit held a public meeting upstairs in the Graduate Pub, Killiney on Tuesday to pull together all those that are affected by the rental crisis in Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown and to discuss potential solutions. Cllr Hugh Lewis said: “The current situation of an ever spiralling housing crisis cannot be allowed to continue any longer. “We hope to start a strong housing campaign that will stand and fight for council housing.”
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23 March 2017 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 3
PROPERTEASE | IS THIS THE MOST FABULOUS DUBLIN HOME CURRENTLY ON THE MARKET?
The
MARILYN MANSION
SYLVIA POWNALL THIS princess pad in Clondalkin almost broke the internet when it went up on daft.ie last weekend. No 44 Harelawn Drive looks like your average humble three-bed semi – until you step through the front door. The Marilyn Munroe-inspired gaff has attracted record attention for selling agent Ross McHugh from Ray Cooke Auctioneers who revealed people have been taking SELFIES outside it. He told The Gazette: “It went online last Thursday and you’d expect 500-ish hits in the first few days. If you got 600
or 650 you’d class that as great interest. “This one has had 205,000 hits on Daft alone. That is just phenomenal.” Ross said the house – complete with Barbie boudoir, Marilyn wall art and a sunbed in the kitchen - is in immaculate condition and “so clean you could eat your dinner off the surfaces”. It’s on the market for €185,000 – or €250,000 with the adjacent site thrown in. Ross revealed: “The owner has been collecting Marilyn memorabilia for a long time adding bits and pieces over the years.
“The fittings and furniture are not included but I have a feeling someone will want to buy it as it is. It’s a piece of pop art come to life. “We’ve had almost 1,000 inquiries, plenty from Marilyn Munroe fans in the UK, Europe and the US. “There were people outside taking selfies at the weekend saying here’s me outside the Marilyn Munroe house. The interest has been off the wall.” A bit like the house then. We’re not sure what Dermot Bannon would make of it – but we’re sure Andy Warhol would wholeheartedly approve.
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PLANNING | DEVELOPERS CONSIDERING MOVE AFTER BRENNANSTOWN ROAD PLAN THWARTED
Legal options may be explored after road scheme is rejected Continued from Page 1
Prior to the Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown Council meeting on March 13, Marlet sent a letter to all councillors urging them to approve the proposed traffic management scheme on the Brennanstown Road. The letter, dated February 13 read: “We respectfully urge you to assent to the traffic management scheme in the interests of proper planning and sustainable development to provide much needed housing for those that need it. Any alternative to this will leave our otherwise serviced lands, sterilized for the foreseeable future.” Then, three days before the council meeting, Marlet sent councillors an email containing a three-page document from their legal team outlining the reasons why the road scheme should be adopted. The email begins by stating that the outlined reasons contained in the attached document were on “advice we have received from Arthur Cox our solicitors”. It continues: “If the Brennanstown Road Part 8 is not adopted on Monday at your council meeting, residentially zoned lands along Brennanstown Road will be effectively sterilized for an unknown length of time. If we find ourselves in this position, we will be placed in the unfortunate position of having to seek a judicial review.” In the attached three-page document, dated March 10, Marlet’s solicitors said: “The only impediment to obtaining this planning permission is the continued failure of the local authority to make a traffic management plan.” The final point of the document states that “it would be very difficult in these circumstances for councillors aware of this failure and acting contrary to the recommendation of the county manager to justify the failure to provide a traffic management plan on a judicial review. The costs
Many councillors raised a range of objections to the proposed plans for Brennanstown Road
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Frank Austin, the council’s Director of Infrastructure and Climate Change, spoke in advance of the vote on the new road scheme and said that “this scheme satisfies the terms of the current development plan”
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in judicial reviews of the kind involved in this case are awarded against the losing parties.” At the March 13 council meeting, Frank Austin, the council’s Director of Infrastructure and Climate Change, spoke to the floor of councillors in advance of the vote on the new road scheme and
said that “this scheme satisfies the terms of the current development plan”. He said that it “reduces traffic speed, it improves road safety, it improves facilities for vulnerable road users, it reduces through traffic, it facilitates zoned lands and it preserves the existing nature of Brennanstown Road”. He also added that in terms of costs this road scheme is feasible but if a full road-widening scheme were to go ahead it would “cost up to €17m and take quite a number of years”. Subsequently, councillors voted 7 to 30 to reject the proposed traffic management scheme as they believed the new plans did not tackle safety and infrastructure problems along the road adequately. Cllr Barry Saul (FG) told The Gazette he voted against the scheme because it did not address the many concerns of local residents in relation to public safety or to easing the traffic burden.
He said: “The plan quite simply was an attempt to open up the area for house building. I believe it’s now back to the drawing board in relation to the Brennanstown Road.” Cllr Deidre Donnelly (Ind) also opposed the proposed plans and said she wasn’t happy with the rationale behind this particular traffic scheme. “At present there is traffic congestion on the road and it is unsafe. I don’t believe that these proposed improvements would have remedied the situation,” she said. Cllr Liam Dockery (FF) echoed his colleagues’ sentiments and voted against the proposed plans, saying: “We need a proper solution, namely a traffic management scheme that enjoys the support of those living on and near the Brennanstown Road. And one that will cater properly for any future development along the road.” Cllr Lynsey McGovern (Ind) also voted against the proposed plans as she didn’t feel proper consideration had been given to the 560 submissions by local residents. She added: “That’s quite an astonishing amount of submissions.” Cllr Carron McKinney (Lab) also opposed the plans and said: “Whilst I am in favour of new developments and acutely aware of the housing need in our county, I am also aware of the legacy of bad planning that we have across the county. “To build over 700 plus units knowing that the infrastructure is not in place to support the residents of those units is shortsighted and frankly irresponsible. We cannot allow the pressure on housing or the threat of legal action by developers to pressurise the council into building housing units with no supportive infrastructure. “We need sustainable planning with accessible infrastructure including a road and public path network capable of supporting new development. This plan failed to achieve that.” Cllr Ossian Smyth (GP) told The Gazette that he voted against the traffic management scheme and said: “It didn’t give a safe route for pedestrians or cyclists. All that was planned was a single footpath on just one side of the road to be shared between people on foot and people on bikes. There should be a safe route designed for people of all ages to walk or cycle to the Luas and to Cabinteely village.” In contrast, Cllr Denis O’Callaghan (Lab) voted in favour of the proposed road scheme going ahead but said he was not surprised that it was voted down. He added: “It appears to me that Fianna Fail and Fine Gael councillors (especially) had an agreement to vote against the scheme. “Councillors from SF and AAA/PBP simply did not have the bottle to vote for it. “I believe the scheme which was voted down was probably the best one to help make life easier for the residents living along and off Brennanstown Road. Any alternative in my opinion will have a much greater impact on the environs of Brennanstown Road and its residents.” The Gazette also approached Marlet Property Group for comment, but they had not replied by the time of going to press.
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Stepaside celebrates St
Laura and Lola Kelly-Flynn The Najos Family
Amelia McGrath with Dad Fiach McGrath
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HOUSANDS of local people celebrated St Patrick’s Day in Stepaside as the parade set off up Kilgobbin Road towards the village and displayed the talents of a large number of different community, charity and sporting groups who marched through the village.
Dawn and Boon Redmond
Pictures: Rose Comiskey
The Movshovich Family
Patricia the street entertainer
Joan and Paul Hogan
Patrick’s Day
The Finnegan Family
Daisy and Poppy Lowe with Lara Dinardi
Gaelscoil Sliabh Rua
On the podium
Street entertainer Mr Shamrock
The Doyle Family
Lucy and Matthew Wilkinson
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SANDYFORD | SHOCKED HOMEOWNERS HIT WITH COSTS UP TO €15K TO FIX DEFECTS
A bitter bill for Beacon owners as they’re told to cough up €10k EACH EMMA NOLAN RESIDENTS at the Beacon South Quarter apartments will be forced to pay up a staggering €10k EACH to fix faults at the complex. The “innocent victims”, owners of the Sandyfordbased apartments, were told last week that they will each be hit with bills of €10,000 in order to fix fire safety and other structural defects. “People are frustrated and worried,” apartment owner Killian Ryan told The Gazette. Owners have also been threatened with legal action by Dublin Fire Brigade if the works needed are not carried out. About 250 ow ners attended a rescheduled annual meeting of the management company at the Ballsbridge Hotel. Last month’s scheduled meeting at a hotel in
Part of the Beacon South Quarter devevlopment, where a collective €10m fund is required to fix a variety of defects across the sprawling blocks
Leopardstown had to be cancelled when too many people turned up to fit in the conference room. Owners of the 880 apartments now face costs of €7,500-€15,000 each to fix the safety defects. Owners of apartments
Ciara’s Opinion is better than thousands at press awards
MINISTER of State with special responsibility for Disabilities, Finian McGrath joined Vincent Crowley, chairman, NewsBrands Ireland, to congratulate Ciara Tomlinson on scooping third place in the Opinion category in the NewsBrands Ireland Press Pass awards. Ciara, a Transition Year student from Jesus and Mary College in Goatstown, beat thousands of entries to win the journalism award, thanks to her impressive piece on mental health, Surrendering To Stigma, which blended comprehensive research with personal experience. Picture: Fennell Photography
in blocks A, B1, C and D are being asked by BSQ Management Company Ltd to pay €9.1 million into a sinking fund for fire remedial works. Residents in blocks A and D were being asked for more than €1 million
in relation to water damage. Property investment company I-RES Reit, the State’s largest private landlord, owns 25% of the apartments at the complex, and supported paying the cost of fixing the
defects. However, “No-one can afford this,” said Killian. “We now have to fund the defects and deficiencies left behind by the people who constructed the development.” Killian, who has lived in BSQ for nearly nine years since he purchased his apar tment under the council’s affordable scheme, said he and others feel let down by the Government. He said that whole blocks can potentially be evicted if the defects are not fixed, but he hopes that it won’t come to that. “I would like if those involved in the construction of the complex did what they were paid to do, which was to provide us with a safe building to live in. “We bought in good faith, so I’d like the problem to be remedied without any financial burden
imposed on the people who purchased homes here.” Deputy Catherine Martin (GR) said that the apartment owners are “innocent victims caught up in a storm clearly not of their making”, and she called on the Government to intervene. Speaking to The Gazette, Deputy Martin said: “There is a lot of rhetoric about fair and equitable solutions in this conversation – the problem is that these are not being defined. “ T h e G ove r n m e n t needs to identify and initiate the individual measures that can support these homeowners and do this as a matter of urgency.” Killian added: “It is a really beautiful development. If given the chance, I would be happy to buy here again – once the problems are fixed.”
FASTNews
Councillors approve range of pro-business support for DLR AISLING KENNEDY
A PACKAGE of probusiness measures to support local economic development and job creation was approved by councillors at the recent Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council meeting. The first measure includes a business support scheme which provides for the payment of a grant to eligible ratepayers equivalent to 4% of their 2016 rates bill, subject to a maximum of €400. In effect, this means that the majority of businesses will see a benefit equivalent to a 2.5% reduction in rates. The second measure is the Rates Vacant Property Assistance Scheme, whereby relief equivalent to 25% of the rates bill will apply to ratepayers whose rate account was assessed at €10,000 or less for 2016, to a maximum of €2,500. The relevant property must be vacant on the date of the making of the rate, ie February 3, 2017.
Additional support The third measure is additional supports for the Vacant Premises Improvement Grant, which will provide a grant towards refurbishment for eligible owners of vacant commercial properties. A grant of €5,000, or 50% of the actual cost (whichever is the lesser) to assist with the interior refurbishment of the premises at the time of new occupancy will be available. Lastly, eligible ratepayers may qualify for more than one business support grant.
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The Ga-Gazette’s bonnie babies
Chloe and Charlotte Coffey are twice as cute!
Joe O’Carroll loves his dinner!
Super-cute little Emma Gilmore (18 months) and her little puppy, sent in by Orla Kennedy
LIttle Amina Hussain is too cute!
Six-month-old Olivia Curtis has a hobby
Send in your baby photographs and...
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WIN!WIN!WIN!
PRING is in the air, and the Gazette’s Bonnie Baby competition is in full swing. We’ve had a wonderful response from mums, dads, proud grandparents and family friends, who’ve shared some of the cutest photos we’ve ever seen. The competition will run for the entire month of March, so keep sending in those wonderful snaps of your little ones – we’ll feature as many as we can in the paper each week until April 6th. Wehavesomegreatprizestogiveaway–includingtwohampersworth€90eachfromourfriendsatNUK Ireland–andoneluckywinner willwinafreefamilyornewbornphotoshootworth€180fromGazettephotojournalist and expert baby photographer Ali, of Alison O’Hanlon Photography. So keep sending in those snaps to competitions@dublingazette.com or via our Facebook page – and don’t forget to include your details and your baby/toddler’s name and age!
Lorraine Byas sent in this photo of gorgeous Daisy (left); while Anna Three year olds Rebecca and Henry Arthurs are the best of cousins
Nine-month-old Henry Delong
Constanzo sent in this little smiler!
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are the cutest Sun hols for just €319? Getaway out of that !
Finlay Kelly is 4 months old and gorgeous!
Lisa Bruen sent in this shot of little Isla Saunders (five months).
Oleg Ovadenko sent in this shot of Max and Daniel enjoying their bottles
Thanks to Jon for sending in this shot of little Isabella Henderson (22 months).
Thanks to Leonie for sending in this pic of nine-month-old Maximiliano
James O’Flynn sent in this shot of Ellen Scott Fitzgerald is a 22-month-old cutie!
Mary (four months) & her furry friend
DUBLIN holiday specialists Cassidy Travel is running a Big Green Sale this month, with reductions on last minute holidays, cruises, city breaks, sun holidays as well as midterm and even Christmas and New Year getaways. The sale takes place across all of Cassidy Travel’s nine shops and online. Seven nights in Tenerife in May, for example, staying at the Laguna Park II, is on offer for just €319 per person, a saving of €390 or over 50 per cent. Also in May, a week in Rhodes at the 3-star Cosmos Maris is reduced by over 30 per cent to just €389 per person sharing.
Later in the year, seven nights in September in the 4-star IFA Caterina in Gran Canaria with flights is from €589 per person sharing, saving a whopping €459. “These are big savings on a
family holiday,” Cassidy Travel’s John Spollen said. “Bargain hunters will find some of the best prices of the year during our sale this month and they cover just about every type of holiday.”
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DUBLINBUSINESS
YOUR BUSINESS LIVE: RDS TO HOST AN INNOVATIVE NEW INITIATIVE
Two days to help the nation’s SME sector EMMA NOLAN
ENTREPRENEUR Sean Gallagher; Claire Reynolds, head of Small and Medium Enterprise at Vodafone Ireland; Minister of State for Employment and Small Business, Pat Breen and Patricia Callan, director, Small Firms Association were happy to point out the merits of a new event for SMEs – Your Business Live. Businesspeople across all levels of the enterprise spectrum will want to put the event in their diaries, as the national two-day SME event at the RDS will gather together executives, decision-makers, entrepreneurs, ow ners and managers from around the country to network, learn and do business, with Vodafone Ireland announced as a title sponsor for the busi-
“Make a note of Your Business Live” – happy to help launch the upcoming initiative
ness event. The event is supported by Ibec for Irish Business, the Small Firms Association and Enterprise Ireland, reinforcing the aim of the event to create a new marketplace for the broad range of Irish
TakeOff a big success at Aer Lingus launch GUY Thompson, president, Fingal Chamber of Commerce; Declan Kearney, director of communications, Aer Lingus and Newstalk’s Chris Donoghue were happy to help launch Aer Lingus’s TakeOff Foundation at the recent Aer Lingus SME breakfast held in conjunction with the Chamber, entitled Understanding Your Customer Journey. The Aer Lingus TakeOff Foundation encompasses the broad spectrum of charity and corporate social responsibility initiatives that the airline engages in and includes continued work with chosen charity partners, UNICEF Ireland and Special Olympics Ireland, as well as fundraising activities undertaken by Aer Lingus staff and volunteers.
SMEs. Your Business Live will support everything from start-ups and microbusinesses, to small- and medium-enterprises, as well as export-led, across industry sectors. The initiative has pro-
moting and supporting business firmly in its sights, with SMEs accounting for a colossal 99.8% of all active businesses in Ireland. Your Business Live will facilitate interaction and collaboration among
business decision-makers, start-ups, owners and managers, providing the opportunity for SMEs to showcase innovative new products and services, in addition to gaining industry knowledge and insights. As part of the event’s focus, networking events, workshops and high-level speaker seminars are set to engage a vibrant SME audience. Claire Reynolds, Vodafone, said: “We are very proud to sponsor the new Your Business Live. This is a unique and important event which will not only give SMEs a platform to showcase their products and services, but also provide opportunity for knowledgesharing, collaboration and networking.” Your Business Live takes place on October 17 and 18 in the RDS.
Celebrating the ties that link business and art SEAN McGrath, chief executive, Allianz; Helene Hugel, artistic director, Helium Arts and Andrew Hetherington, chief executive, Business to Arts are pictured at the launch of the 2017 Allianz Business to Arts Awards. The 26th annual awards celebrate and promote the cultural and economic benefits of arts and business engagement, with Dublin-based businesses invited to apply online. Previous award winners have included Bank of Ireland, Sky Ireland, An Post and ESB. For further information and to apply before the closing date on Monday, May 8, see businesstoarts.ie/awards.
New Career Traineeship programme introduced with a Tallaght briefing A BRIEFING to highlight recruitment for new Career Traineeship programmes was held in Tallaght on March 7. Education and training boards and staff from Intreo offices nationwide were given an overview of how the Career Traineeship model works, and discussed a collaborative approach to recruitment for such programmes. Irish Hotels Federation president Joe Dolan provided an overview of how the hospitality sector has been heavily involved in the creation of these programmes and how this collaborative approach can provide huge benefits for employers and future employees alike. Career Traineeship is an occupational training programme based on identified labour market needs designed to offer trainees a foothold in a career. It provides a combination of on- and offthe-job learning and is generally of 6 to 18 months’ duration. The event was organised by SOLAS and the Department of Social Protection. Mayo, Sligo, Leitrim ETB and the Irish Hotels Federation, who have been involved in the pilot Career Traineeship programmes, offered their insight into their experiences. A key feature of Career Traineeship is partnership with industry to ensure training meets identified employment opportunities. Career Traineeships are currently being rolled out in the following areas: hospitality, engineering, visual effects for animation and post-production, and digital sales and marketing for small businesses. The following three years will see Career Traineeships developed in other areas.
DUBLINLIFE
JAMES HENDICOTT
combined a more classical bent with reproductions of contemporary clasIOBHR A QUINLAN has sics like Pink Floyd’s ‘The Dark Side taken the long road to launch- Of The Moon’ and covers of Daft ing her first single, released Punk and Arcade Fire. Stepping earlier this month. into her solo guise for the first time, She trained as an operatic soprano, Quinlan’s new output can be broadly studying an MPhil in composition at described as chamber pop. Trinity and broadening her musical “I started out with pure, straight education in Berlin. music and nearly dropped out about G dgfkjsgfds dfs fd kljghdfgkljdhlflg hlglfhgds hgdsf. Picture: Xxxxx Zzzzzz That led, eventually, to a conceptual three fdsfkj times in first year,” she recalls of new composition she has self-funded her early days studying music. by working with and teaching her art. “I’d actually made a plan to go to Along the way, Quinlan was also jazz college at the end of the first year, a part of the highly successful Trin- and I’d done the audition and got in. ity College Orchestra, where she Then I decided I wanted to stay, as it
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The Dublin Gazette guide to what’s on across the county
clicked that I could pass the exams and there was something I can really take from it all. “I started doing a lot of the opera training, and working with a teacher called Veronica Dunne. She’s a complete opera legend, and I was fascinated by what she could do. She trains the voice as an instrument, and can do amazing things with it. Opera’s very technical, but it teaches you so many ways to use the voice.” Quinlan later branched into jazz and wrote a dissertation on how opera can be incorporated into different styles, before using a period of
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THE BIG INTERVIEW P16 STYLE P18 MOTORING P19
more casual training in Berlin to work on her style and explore the city’s expansive performance offerings. Naturally, Quinlan’s own writing takes in her broad influences, but also explores her own view of the world around her. As the first single reveals, she’s not afraid to make a statement. Despite the financial pressures of the production process, Quinlan has chosen to donate the proceeds of debut offering ‘From His Rib’ to the Abortion Rights Campaign. “The title comes from my own thought process, thinking back to where patriarchal structures might
come from. For me, Adam and Eve, that’s the root,” she explains. “The idea that women are less than men. The story of Eve being made from a part of Adam implies that women are secondary to men, and in being thrust out of the garden, it’s Eve that shoulders the blame.” “I really noticed the difference when I came back from Berlin,” Quinlan said of her decision to hand over proceeds to the ARC. “I realised we’re the exception, that there shouldn’t be a stigma like there is here. And it was just so infuriating. I wrote this around the March for Choice in 2016, after experiencing the difference in attitudes, stigma and understanding of the whole women’s healthcare thing.” ith the album – due later this year – still in the production process, Quinlan has recorded her work alongside SFiiiNX Sinfonia, an ensemble featuring members of the Trinity Orchestra, but also with input from Dublin alt-rock band Spies. Getting everyone together in the studio has been a learning curve. “By the time we got down to the studio I wanted to play around with percussion a bit more,” she explains. “It’s weird, when you’re writing that kind of stuff you do it through software called Sibelius, which is a kind of mock up of what it might sound like. I had this idea of what to expect, but it wasn’t until I started recording that I really knew, and I ended up doing a bit of playing around in the studio.” The first live show will take place later this month, with unrecorded content also given an airing. “We’re playing at Fumbally Stables, which is intimate, but there’s space to fit an ensemble of ten people in there semi-amplified,” Quinlan tells us. “If the venue were too big, it would lose a lot of the timbre of the instruments. “When we start to gig, it might work fine in one venue and not at all in another. It’s a whole other thing we have to work with.” As for that full-length release? It was originally meant to be an EP, but Quinlan has decided to just keep going. “The album’s half done,” she reveals. “It’s fully written, I just have to finance the studio and the production. “There’s a lot of up at 2am doing admin, back up at 6am doing it again,” she says of her journey, describing the passion behind the project. “It can be hard to stop the development stage and bring it into real life... but I’ve now finally reached that point, and can’t wait to have it out there.” Siobhra Quinlan will debut new music from her forthcoming album at Fumbally Stables on March 30th. Tickets, priced at €10, are available via Eventbrite.
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Siobhra will debut music from her upcoming album at Fumbally Stables on March 30. Photos: Tara Thomas Photography (tarathomas.net)
Meet the soprano SINGER COMPOSER SIOBHRA QUINLAN TALKS OPERA, JAZZ & WOMEN’S RIGHTS
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DUBLINLIFE
BORD GAIS AWARDS
Celebrating the best of student creativity found all over Dublin
DIARY
COTTAGE MARKETS: NEW INITIATIVE TO HIGHLIGHT PRODUCE, CRAFTS
THE shortlist for the annual Bord Gais Energy Student Theatre Awards has been revealed ahead of the the awards ceremony in the Bord Gais Energy Theatre on May 17. This year, the judges said they faced particularly difficult choices, thanks to a terrific range of talented schools, stars and productions to consider all across the city. However, the finalist winners are as follows ...
DUBLIN PRIMARY SCHOOLS AND STUDENTS St Aidan’s NS in Tallaght has been shortlisted in the Best Overall School Musical category for its production of Robin and the Sherwood Hoodies, by 3rd to 6th class pupils. St Pius X BNS in Terenure has been shortlisted in the Best Overall School Musical category for its school production of Seussical Jr. St Mochta’s NS in Clonsilla has been shortlisted in the Best Overall School Musical category for its 5th and 6th class production of Oliver. 5th class student Darragh Malone from St Mochta’s NS in Clonsilla has been shortlisted in the Best Male Performance in a Leading Role category for his performance as Fagin in Oliver. Scoil Assaim in Raheny has been shortlisted in the Best Set category for its set creation of Firelog. St Gabriel’s Primary School in Ballyfermot has been shortlisted in the Best Choreography category for its choreography in the production of Battle of the Decades by 4th, 5th and 6th class students. 5th class student Ben de Barra from St Brendan’s NS in Skerries has been shortlisted in the Best Short Scene Script category for his script entitled The Happy Garden. 5th class student Elliot Tuite from St Joseph’s BNS in Terenure has been shortlisted in the Best Dramatic Review category for his review of Step Up and Dance. DUBLIN SECONDARY SCHOOLS AND STUDENTS Belvedere College SJ on Denmark St has been shortlisted in the Best Overall School Play
category for its production of The Children of the Rising by 2nd year students. Belvedere College SJ again shortlisted, this time in the Best Overall School Play category for its 4th and 5th year production of Lord of the Flies. St Vincent’s Castleknock College featuring Mount Sackville, has been shortlisted in the Best Overall School Musical category for its production of Miss Saigon by 4th, 5th and 6th year students. Secondary student Aimee Kearney from St Vincent’s Castleknock College featuring Mount Sackville has also been shortlisted in the Best Female Performance in a Leading Role category for her role as Kim in Miss Saigon by 4th, 5th and 6th year students. St Fintan’s High School in Sutton has been shortlisted in the Best Set category for its set creation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream by 4th year students. Secondary student Hannah Brady from Wesley College in Ballinteer has been shortlisted in the Best Female Performance in a Leading Role category for her role as Gar (Private) in Philadelphia, Here I Come by 4th and 5th year students. Secondary student Rebecca Brady from Sutton Park School has been shortlisted in the Best Performance in a Supporting Role category for her role as Miss Hannigan in the school’s production of Annie. St Aidan’s Communit y School from Tallaght has been shortlisted in the Best Musical Number category for its performance of Time in the production of Time by 1st year students.
Grow It Yourself’s Karen O’Donohoe and Michael Kelly announcing that 20 Cottage Markets will soon pop up – including one in Raheny
Should fare well A NUMBER of special markets are set to open in Dublin this year as a result of the Cottage Market initiative unveiled by GIY (Grow it Yourself) Last month, community groups from across the country were invited to apply to the initiative for funding in order to establish and run their very own Cottage Market, with Raheny selected as one of the successful locations. Organisers say they love the idea of being able to showcase the work of local craft and food pro-
ducers in a safe and happy environment. The team behind the new Cottage Market are aiming to host their first market on the first Friday of every month. For further details on each of the existing Cottage Markets, see http:// thecottagemarket.ie.
A TACTILE SHOWCASE OF BRONZE ARTISTRY GORMLEY’S Fine Art in Dublin 2 will host Eamonn Ceannt’s new exhibition, Movado, from Thursday, March 23 to
Thursday, April 13, marking Eamonn’s fourth solo show with the gallery. Working exclusively with bronze, Eamonn’s sculptures adopt a tactile approach with a strong commitment to form. Entry to the exhibition at Gormley’s, 27 South Frederick Street, Dublin 2 is free and all work is available to purchase. See www.gormleys.ie.
CALLING ALL KIDS TO HELP THE PLANET ATTENTION, primary schools! It’s the final
call for Dublin primary schools to enter the 2017 Our World Irish Aid Awards. Pupils are encouraged to put the final touches on their projects in time for the closing date for submissions, which is Friday, March 24. This year’s awards theme – For People and Planet – has been designed to help pupils to understand the interdependence between people and the natural world, and how the wellbeing of people, wildlife and the environment is intercon-
WHAT’S ON THIS WEEK
Siobhra Quinlan: This week’s Gazette feature star plays the intimate Fumbally Stables with her chamber-pop ensemble on March 30. Underground Run: The port tunnel opens up for an unlikely 10km race heading under the city. Up one tunnel, back the other, medals for all. March 26. Cry Monster Cry: Dublin brothers with gorgeous melodies play three unusually intimate
hip-hop duo drop in on the Olympia Theatre on March 30 as part of their European tour. New album of the week: Anohni – Paradise. The second album released under this pseudonym for the former Anthony and the Johnson’s singer, a vocally-stunning transgender New Yorker. Expect soulful, high-pitched musings on life’s darker side, delivered beautifully.
James Hendicott’s mini-guide to all that’s hot in the city
Students from St Anne’s Community College Kilalloe, Co Clare, performing Les Miserables at last year’s Bord Gais awards. Picture: Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland
shows in Whelan’s Upstairs venue, debuting new material in aid of Aware. March 24-26. Cine Concert: Torrey Pines The IFI explore mental health and gender identity in this debut film from Clyde Peterson, an animated journey accompanied
with live music on March 27. Humans Need Not Apply Trinity Science Gallery’s latest explores artificial intelligence and the concept of a post-work, machine-led world. Until mid May. Run The Jewels Influential
nected. Pupils have been learning about the UN’s Global Goals for Sustainable Development, which 193 countries – including Ireland – have agreed to work towards by 2030. In particular, pupils have been learning how the 17 UN goals are addressing the root causes of poverty and protecting the planet, as well as how they can play their part as global citizens. All entries will be assessed on their creativity, understanding of the theme and their impact.
23 March 2017 GAZETTE 15
‘The UK’s departure from EU is a challenge but we will be ready and Ireland can benefit’
DUBLINLIFE
HUGE SPIKE IN NUMBERS AT HEDGEHOG RESCUE CENTRE
FRANCES FITZGERALD TD, MINISTER FOR JUSTICE AND EQUALITY SINCE June 23rd, 2016, there has been a lot of talk and speculation about what the departure of the UK from the European Union will mean; both for Ireland and the EU as a whole. In the next few weeks, British prime minister Theresa May will deliver the formal letter which begins the formal process of the UK’s departure. Firstly, it’s important to stress the UK the future of the EU to work best for its is leaving the EU immediately. This procitizens and the European economy. cess will take at least two years. In the These priorities have been made very meantime, there will be no changes to clear to every other EU member state, our relationship with the UK, and your and to the British as well. Both the EU rights will remain the same. chief negotiator and the British PM Irish people can travel easily to Brithave openly acknowledged that they ain, live there, work there and in some want to solve the issue of the border cases, vote there. That will not change while protecting the gains of the peace any time in the next two years, and this process, and that this must be a key part Government will be doing our utmost of whatever deal is negotiated. in the negotiation process to ensure One of the four headline priorities folthat this doesn’t happen at all. lowing the UK departure from the EU is The first thing that will happen is that maintaining the Common Travel Area, there will be complex and sometimes which falls under my own remit. very difficult negotiations, in which It allows freedom of travel between Ireland will be part of the team of 27 the two jurisdictions for Irish and UK countries remaining in the EU. citizens, and provides for largely recipIreland is prepared for this. We’ve rocal benefits of citizenship, in terms of been preparing for these negotiations entitlements to reside, work and access since before the UK voted. My Ministeservices. The Common Travel Area is rial colleagues and I have been working particularly important in the context to build relations with our colleagues of the Northern Ireland Peace Process in Europe. We have a team of officials and relations on the island of Ireland. with extensive experience in complex The Common Travel Area is an international negotiations focused on important feature of the close relationgetting the best outcome possible. ship between Ireland and the UK with Through the All-Island Civic Dialong-established benefits for trade and logue on Brexit, over 1,200 representatourism between our two countries. tives of a broad range of industries, Both governments value the Common sectors and civic society groups met in Travel Area and will work to keep it in over 16 events in four months and displace. Its importance has been highcussed their concerns about Brexit with lighted through political and diplomatic Government ministers and officials. engagement with other member states, This process has helped to deepen and and there is ongoing engagement with expand our negotiation priorities. EU institutions on this issue. Ireland has made our priorities for It will take a while for the UK to actuthese Brexit negotiations very clear. We ally leave the EU, although ironing out want to protect our economy, especially its future relationship with the Union sectors such as agrifood that are heavily could take even longer. This will bring reliant on the UK for their business. changes, but not all of them will be for For us to do this, we need the closest the worse. There are also some real possible trading relationship with the opportunities for Ireland – as the only UK, something that a number of other English-speaking country in the EU, EU countries also want. with the fastest growing economy in We want to maintain our the EU in 2016, and as the EuroCommon Travel Area with pean HQ of so many multinational the UK and ensure that firms. The negotiating teams are the border between us and ready. The Government has its prithe North does not return. orities set. Information that helps We want to protect the peace people to understand what’s going on process and ensure is being and will continue all aspects of the to be made available. Good Friday This won’t be easy. But Agreement are we have overcome chalfully respected. lenges before, and we We also want will again with Brexit.
FEATURES
GAZETTE
BREXIT | THE TANAISTE’S MESSAGE
23 March 2017 GAZETTE 17
GAZETTE
16 GAZETTE 23 Month 2017
HEDGE SCHOOL:
SYLVIA POWNALL
Fionnbar the hedgehog , above, one of many hedgehogs rescued by Yvonne, below
A RESCUE centre for hedgehogs is bracing itself for an influx of injured animals as the spring/summer gardening season gets under way. Hedgehog Rescue Dublin – based in Rush – has just released 57 hogs out of hibernation having taken in almost 600 stricken creatures this winter. Founder Yvonne McCann, 33, says the volunteer sanctuary is coming under increasing pressure to cope with demand for its services. She told The Gazette: “We started in August 2013 basically because there was nobody else doing it in the area. “The closest centre to us was Kildare Animal Foundation but for a lot of people it was not feasible to take a hedgehog down there. “It was never supposed to be as big as it got, it was just supposed to be a temporary fix but the demand was huge. We set up a Facebook page and within two weeks it had thousands of followers and we were full to the rafters. “Now we have got to the point where people are bringing in other animals so we are probably going to look at taking in foxes, badgers, birds of prey…” The centre caters for full-grown hogs and orphaned young – or hoglets – and relies on donations from the public to stay operational. Yvonne, who has an ecology background, said: “Generally what we see varies through the seasons. This time of year they are coming out of hibernation, they haven’t eaten or drank anything for three months. We see a lot of dehydrated hedgehogs and they are very hungry. “If there’s no food around it forces them into daylight which is not ideal as they are strictly nocturnal and it makes them more susceptible to foxes and dogs attacking them. “In spring and summer we see a lot of injuries from strimmers – people doing their hedges end up taking the faces off them or slicing off their feet. We are also seeing a lot of poisoning. “We ask people not to put down slug pellets because if you have a hedgehog in your garden you will not get slugs or snails, but if a hedgehog eats the pellets they get secondary poisoning which can kill them. “This is actually wiping a lot of them out. We’re trying to get Fingal County Council on board so we can go out to schools and do talks
Everything you need to know about the spiney little critter HEDGEHOGS, or Erinaceus europaeus to give them their correct term, are carnivorous mammals which eat caterpillars, beetles, earthworms, mice, frogs, snails and slugs. They typically live up to six years and grow up to 30cm in length, weighing an average 700g. Hedgehogs have about 5,000 spines. Each spine lasts about a year before it drops out and is replaced. They curl into a ball to protect themselves when alarmed. They are nocturnal, and earned their name because of their peculiar foraging habits - hedgehogs emit pig-like grunts as they root through undergrowth for food. Hedgehogs have two litters every year – one in spring and one in autumn. The species is deemed to be under threat of extinction and numbers have declined by up to 30 per cent over the past decade. Finally, the collective noun for a group of hedgehogs (left) is an ‘array’.
INTERVIEW: MEET THE YOUNG DUB SINGLE-HANDEDLY SAVING THE MOST HELPLESS LITTLE ANIMALS to educate the kids about them. “There’s no funding because we’re not a registered charity yet so it’s difficult to get funding. It costs a fortune to rehabilitate a hedgehog. “If we have a case where a strimmer has taken its back leg off then we need a vet to take the rest of the leg off and treat the wound. “It’s a struggle like all rescue centres out there. You just do what you can. My dad is a retired farmer so at least we had a bit of land for a purposebuilt unit. We got the cages donated. “It’s my vocation, I’m animal mad and hedgehogs are fabulous little creatures. You’d be surprised by how many people have never seen one.” Yvonne, who runs the centre virtually singlehanded with the help of a handful of local volunteers, offers an adoption pack which allows you to choose the hedgehog’s name, visit it, and see it released back into the wild once rehabilitated. The package, which costs e40, also entitles the sponsor to a certificate, a crocheted hedgehog,
a garden ornament with the same theme and a “It’s painstaking feeding them, just a few drops ceramic hog (full details on the Facebook page). with a little 1ml syringe until they can get a suck Aside from funding the real challenge for reflex. Everything has to be manufactured specialYvonne is to educate the public on how to cre- ly because there’s nothing out there small enough ate a safe environment for them. She urges against to feed a baby hedgehog. the use of slug pellets and asks anyone who sees “These syringes are specially designed with a a hog out during the day to put it in a high-sided plastic tip that is soft on their palate. For the first box with a hot water - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - few days they might bottle and ring her at just take one tenth of 086 8810492. a millilitre at a time. She warned: “If a “After two weeks hedgehog is out durtheir eyes open and ing the day then that then you can leave is not okay. In sumsome formula in the mer we get a lot of lid of a jam jar and orphans whose mother has been hit by a car. They they will start lapping it up.” might only be 20 or 30 grams in weight. Yvonne released 57 hedgehogs from hibernation “You’ve to feed them through the night, they are last week. She tries to return them as close to the really tiny. I’ve had them as small as 10 grams – spot where they were found as possible, as long as you’re talking half the size of your thumb – and it’s not too close to a main road or badger set as when they’re first born they don’t have any spikes. they can prey on them when hungry.
‘You’ve to feed them through the night, they are really tiny. I’ve had them as small as 10 grams – you’re talking half the size of your thumb’
She said: “This is something I feel passionate about. They’re going extinct because of human interference. If we can offset that then there’s hope - there’s no point spending a few hundred euros rehabilitating a hedgehog to put it back into a habitat that has the same problems.” Like any nurse Yvonne does her best not to get emotionally attached, but things don’t always go to plan. She admitted: “At the beginning it was hard. We had a lot of hand-reared babies and it was hard to release them, but we know they’re wild animals and you’re not allowed to keep them by law. “I like to see them go. That is what makes the job worthwhile, you rehabilitate them and get them back into the wild to reproduce. “I do worry about them when they’re gone. We had one this year that came in at death’s door but he pulled through. “I was emotional about him heading off, but deep down I know it’s the best thing for him.”
GAZETTE
18 GAZETTE 23 March 2017
DUBLINLIFE
STYLE EMMA NOLAN
THOUGH some may roll their eyes at this, many will agree that Man’s Best Friend is just as deserving of some retail therapy now and again as us humans! River Island’s Dog Collection is back for its second season, with some adorable pieces for any dog, from the smallest of puppers to the biggest of doggos. I mean, what dog doesn’t need a bomber pink jacket? So, this week, it’s time to ...
Pawsfur Fashion Lotus print crop top €20; Leggings €30
Rainbow rain shorts €30; Grey marl hoodie €40; Colour block bikini top €23
See in store for prices per product to suit your prized pooch pet
Rainbow rain leggings €30; Crop top €20
T back vest top €20; Rainbow leggings €29
Spirited style
EMMA NOLAN Style Editor
NEW gym gear is the number-one motivation to go to the gym – FACT! Exclusive to Dublin, Accessorize has just launched its brand new Spirit Collection, which will brighten your work-out. With bright floral prints and sporty-chic marl designs in leggings, tops, hoodies, sweaters and crop tops, this athleisure collection is all about being ‘the best you’, whether you’re heading to yoga class or exploring the great outdoors.
M50MOTORING
GAZETTE
23 March 2017 GAZETTE 19
in association with
The Dublin Gazette drives you through the motoring world on a tour of the latest models, technology & industry news
NEW CAPTUR CLAIMS MORE ADVENTURE RENAULT revealed the new Captur SUV at the Geneva Motor Show. The Captur has been the top-selling B-segment crossover in Europe in 2016. The urban crossover has gained even more allure with its C-Shape lighting signature and new body colours. The new generation Captur can also be fitted with a fixed glass panoramic roof. Available only in two-tone configuration, the new feature The new Citroen Grand C4 Picasso has a more stylish lighting pack and is more comfortable than in the past with seven seat capacity and prices starting at €28,995 before delivery charges.
improves ambient light in the cabin. New Captur keeps its two-tone body colour option and along with a wider range of colour choices gives motorists a choice of 36 different combinations to create their very own Captur. The new Captur is equipped with full LED headlights to sharpen the car’s looks and improves safety while providing greater efficiency. LED daytime running lights are built into the lower bumper in a C shape, forming the brand’s light signature. The rear lights feature the same signature, visible day and night.
Citroen comfort and style in Grand C4 Picasso Citroen’s image of comfort and style is truly reflected in the big Grand C4 Picasso that carries a seven person load in an airy capsule that’s pleasant to drive as Michael Moroney reports when it took the people carrier on tour.
THERE’S a unique and distinctive style to the Citroen Grand C4 Picasso that combines airiness with a feeling of artistic cubism that was characteristic of the Picasso design style. When you look at the Citroen Grand C4 Picasso from different angles you can sometime see a different car each time. The Citroen Grand C4 Picasso driving experience is also unique compared with many other cars. The new generation of this top-selling seven seat MPV has evolved with a level of comfort and brightness, helped by the panoramic sunroof. You’ll never feel claustrophobic in the car that packs space, comfort and safety on an internally bright package.
Citroen has used the combination of the PSA engineering technology with its own unique design style to create a people carrier that’s modern and distinctive. It doesn’t have the ‘Mammy Bus’ felling to it or boxiness that has pushed many drivers to consider SUVs rather than more practical MPVs. Citroen’s Grand C4 Picasso will always be distinctive and now with a re-launched brand under a new Irish distributor, the Citroen brand aims to retain and enhance its value. For family drivers, that means a competitive entry price combined with lots of specification value that’s now topped off by a five-year warranty. Continued on next page
GAZETTE
20 GAZETTE 23 March 2017
M50MOTORING
Citroen Grand C4 Picasso: A wellequipped family car Continued from page 19
Add all of those features and you begin to get more comfortable with the Citroën brand for the right reasons. I took the new generation Citroen Grand C4 Picasso for some lengthy drives and its 1.6-litre turbo-diesel engine was able for the job of hauling a big car, and its load, in comfort and with economy. This engine is used throughout the Citroen and Peugeot ranges and has been behind French group’s success in lowering CO2 emission standards. Out on the road and linked with the six-speed, manual gearbox, the cruising speed of 120km/ hr on the motorway was at an effortless 2,000rpm on the engine. That’s the economy sweet spot and the large dash screen provided a good view of how my driving styled was evolving. I liked the large digi-
Citroen C4 Grand Picasso 1.6 HDI SPECIFICATIONS
Engine Engine power 0 – 100km/hr Economy Fuel Tank Capacity CO2 emissions Road Tax Band Main Service Euro NCAP Rating Warranty tal display of my speed, coupled with economy hints based around a subtle but clear alternative rev counter dial. With some sensible driving, I was less than 20% off the rated economy figure of 23.3km/litre (4.31/100km or 65mpg). That’s a good result from what is a big car and it carried a big load over two long days driving in the mid-west. I liked the
1.6 litre 120hp 11.3 seconds 23.3km/litre (4.31/100km or 65mpg) 69 litres 111g/km A4 €200 25,000km/12 months 5 star (2013) 5 years /100,000km fuel filler cap approach with hand-free opening and cap-less cover to keep the taint of diesel from your hands. This was a car that was easy to get used to despite its large size. The D-shaped steering wheel felt a little unusual at first, but I soon got to see its benefits. The steering wheel is a multi-function one with a nice tactile feel to it.
The Citroen Grand C4 Picasso is well equipped to be the dominant family car with its seven seat capacity. One of the especially attractive features for families is the fact that middle row of three seats are all individually adjustable. They also come with ISO-Fix couplings so that two child seats a bolster seat will fit, important for family transport. The additional two rear seats are easily brought into action and when not needed they fold flat into the floor. Citroen includes a space saver spare wheel with the car and that’s tucked under the boot floor on the outside, but at least it’s there. T he car is well equipped with safety features, including two new optional driver assistance packages are available, which introduce Citroen first active safety systems such as Active Lane Departure Warning and Active Blind Spot Moni-
in association with
The new Citroen Grand C4 Picasso has wide opening doors and access to the third row of seats is reasonably good and (inset) The stylish in the cab for the Citroën Grand C4 Picasso is very modern with a large central screen that’s clear and can be set to suit individual style preferences.
toring. The Driver Assistance Pack One contains active lane departure warning system, active blind spot monitoring system, speed limit recognition, intelligent beam headlights and driver attention alert. Driver Assistance Pack Two includes all of the above, as well as active radar guided cruise control. The Citroen Grand C4 Picasso scored highly in the Euro NCAP crash
test programme to add to its accolades. The make boot opening easier Citroen is now offers hands-free tailgate technology on the Grand C4 Picasso Flair version for an additional €800 to allow the boot to open by simply waving a foot under the rear bumper. The entry model in the Citroen Grand C4 Picasso range is a petrol engine car competitively priced at €28,995, while I
drove the 1.6-litre turbodiesel version. Peugeot offers a similar MPV in the 5008 but the Citroen Grand C4 Picasso feels so much more spacious and airy. Other options include the Toyota Verso and the Volkswagen Touran, but for me the Citroen Grand C4 Picasso wins out in terms of comfort, economy and sheer driving pleasure with great front-end visibility.
New compact and efficient Suzuki Swift on the way this June
The Suzuki Swift: More modern styling and improved economy
FOLLOWING on from its launch in the Japanese domestic market late last year, Suzuki recently unveiled the new European version of the Swift. The new car is expected to be available in Ireland in June of this year. This new Swift comes with new styling and a performance-enhancing lighter body with advanced safety technologies. Suzuki claims that the new Swift comes with improved visibility, a spacious cabin and ample luggage space. The new Swift is built on a new vehicle
platform which is claimed to be light and highly rigid. The car’s under body structure and component layout claims to have resulted in the use of a highly rigid frame that enhances collision safety. This new Swift body structure is now 30kg lighter than before which has contributed to the car registering a kerb weight of just 890kg (SZ3 model), 120kg lighter overall for the whole car. The new Swift will be available with either a 90bhp 1.2-litre four cylinder Dualjet engine that claims 23km/litre
(65mpg) or 111bhp 1.0 litre three-cylinder Boosterjet engine that claims 21.5km/ litre (61mpg). Both are low CO2 emission petrol engines. The cars are claimed to be 19% more powerful and 8% more fuel efficient than outgoing models. The new Swift is 10mm shorter than the outgoing model, while its wheelbase is 20mm longer. Suzuki claims that this creates more interior room including 25% more luggage capacity at 254 litres, or 54 litres more than the outgoing model.
23 March 2017 GAZETTE 21
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CO2 levels falling as Peugeot taking the lead THE levels of CO2 emission from cars in Europe fell by 1.2% according to a new report by JATO Dynamics, which covered 23 European car markets. The report shows that Peugeot led the brand ranking, with its average emissions falling by 1.7g/km in 2016, to give an average finishing CO2 rate of 117.8 g/ km, across all new car models. The result was 1.4 g/km lower than the total seen in 2015. It represents the smallest annual percentage improvement for the last 10 years. JATO claims that this can be attributed to the slower growth of diesel registrations in 2016, which produce lower CO2 emissions. On a country level, Norway had the lowest CO2 emissions of all countries analysed. Incentives to increase the use of electric vehicles (EVs) and hybrids resulted in these segments accounting for 39% of the country’s total registrations. Notably, the Netherlands and Denmark were the only two markets with increased average CO2 emissions in 2016; again the major driver of change was government policy. The reduction of tax incentives in the Netherlands resulted in a 53% fall in demand for PHEVs, and increased tax rates for EVs in Denmark resulted in a 71% fall in EV registrations.
to 2015. Both Peugeot and Citroen benefit from their smaller ranges of SUVs/large vehicles. Toyota over took Renault in third place with its improvements largely thanks to the strong performance of its hybrid range, which accounted for 39% of its European registrations in 2016. Notably, Peugeot leads the way in reducing emissions from their car range in Toyota’s average emissions for its hybrid Europe, ahead of Citroën, with hybrid leader Toyota in third place. range grew by 4.3g/km Peugeot led the brand ranking for a sec- due to the launch of its RAV4 Hybrid. ond year as it decreased its average CO2 The only brands not to decrease CO2 emissions by 1.7g/km. This was primarily emissions in 2016 were Nissan, Ford and due to a lower CO2 emission average for Mazda. This can largely be attributed to the its petrol engines. Peugeot’s top-seller, the prominence of these brands with regards to Peugeot 208, decreased its average CO2 particular models. A significant portion of emissions by 1.3g/km from 99.3g/km to Nissan’s registrations were SUVs. Similarly, 98g/km. Ford and Mazda’s average CO2 emissions PSA Group’s other volume brand Citro- increases can be attributed to increased en, occupied second place with 103.3g/km, registrations of the Mustang and MX-5 respecwhich is a reduction of 2.3g/km compared tively.
GAZETTE
22 GAZETTE 23 March 2017
M50MOTORING
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Nissan adds new features to Qashqai
NISSAN recently unveiled the new Qashqai, with claims of significant improvements to the car’s character. The Qashqai upgrades focus on a new exterior design, higher levels of interior quality and improved driving performance. New Nissan Intelligent Mobility technologies have also been added, continuing Nissan’s journey towards zero emissions and zero fatalities. The new Qashqai will be available with ProPILOT autonomous drive capability. Controlling the steering, acceleration and braking in a single lane on highways, Nissan claims that this will provide drivers with more control of their vehicle and a more confident drive, plus greater freedom when they want it, whether during heavy traffic congestion or highspeed cruising. The design changes are most obvious in the cabin, where Nissan claims an
FASTNews
Renault’s electric Zoe
Renault-Nissan Alliance and Transdev to jointly develop driverless vehicle fleet system RENAULT and Nissan Alliance and Transdev have joined forces with Transdev to jointly explore development of mobility services with fleets of electric driverless vehicles for public and on-demand transportation. The companies will collaborate to develop a comprehensive, modular transportation system to enable clients to book rides, and mobility operators to Nissan has redesigned the Qashqai with new styling inside and out and more technology features
monitor and operate self-driving car fleets. Transdev currently operates in 19 countries where the French-
improved layout, higherquality materials and more advanced technology. The range-topping models come with new seats trimmed in high-quality soft nappa leather, with 3D quilting on the centre panels. The Qashqai gets a new D-shaped multi-function steering wheel with satinchrome inserts. It features a new four-way controller for the combi-meter display, for more intuitive use
and less ‘eyes off the road’ time. The NissanConnect infotainment system, complete with DAB digital radio and satellite navigation, now features a new user interface. A new option for music fans is a BOSE seven-speaker premium sound system. Nissan claims to have made a number of underthe-skin improvements to the new Qashqai. They claim that modifications to the suspension, damp-
ing and steering systems have resulted in an even more refined on-the-road experience. Nissan is using better noise absorption materials and increased rear glass thickness both of which have led to a reduction in cabin noise from the road, engine and wind. The Qashqai gets new 17, 18 and 19-inch alloy wheels, all claimed to be aerodynamically optimised to maximise efficiency.
Nissan claims that the new Qashqai retains its class-leading drag coefficient of 0.31, and continues as segment leader on C02 emissions, with only 99g/km from the 1.5-litre dCi 110 diesel. The Qashqai continues to be offered with Traffic Sign Recognition, Driver Attention Alert, Intelligent Park Assist, Intelligent Around View Monitor, Blind Spot Warning and Lane Departure Warning.
based group operates 43,000 vehicles and 22 tramway networks. The research will initially include field tests in the Paris-Saclay region with Renault’s electric Zoe models, which is claimed to be the the leading electric vehicle in Europe.
Avoid a crash diet – don’t eat at the wheel
DRIVERS caught snacking at the wheel face fines and penalty points For road safety reasons as well as poor digestion, it makes good sense to avoid eating and drinking while at the wheel. Attempting to eat or drink while driving is a distraction estimated to double a driver’s risk of being involved in a crash, according to research from London’s Brunel University. You can also be prosecuted for not being in proper control of your vehicle, an offence punishable by a fixed penalty and points on your driving licence. You may even be prosecuted for careless driving which again
means points on your licence and an unlimited fine. Eating and drinking when we are driving takes your attention away from the driving task will increase our risk of collision. Despite this, as you drive around Dublin city you see so many drivers who don’t see it as a problem to unwrap a pasty, sip a scalding hot coffee or glug from a large juice carton on a journey. Remember that driving is a complex enough task already. So trying to do anything else at the same time just makes the journey riskier because we’re not fully focused on driving. If something then goes
wrong, we’re likely to react more slowly because our attention is elsewhere. And when you do need to react, there’s the food item or beverage to deal with, too. For safety reasons make sure you are always in full control of your car. Keep both hands, and all your brain, on the driving task. Focusing on anything else is a distraction that will increase the risk of a collision. The best advice is to plan your journeys so there’s time for snack and drinks breaks built in. Stop somewhere safe, such as a proper parking area or motorway service station. Don’t believe any drivers who say they can multi-task safely while driving.
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or call 01 601 0240
23 March 2017 GAZETTE 23
in association with
Spirit unveil new Volvo showroom SPIRIT Motor Group recently launched its state of the art new Volvo showroom and service centre on Birch Avenue, south Dublin, with a special event attended by loyal customers, local VIPs and Volvo enthusiasts. Spirit Motor Group is the first dealership in Ireland to launch the new global Volvo Retail Experience facility. Volvo ambassadors including, RTE’s Room to Improve host Dermot Bannon, Leinster Rugby players Isa Nacewa, Josh Van Der Flier and Jordi Murphy and Josepha Madigan TD were in attendance. The new showroom focuses on space and design and reflecting Scandinavian-inspired values of ‘cool on the outside and warm on the inside’-style architecture. With beautifully designed Swedish furnishings and free use of Wi-Fi, customers can relax during their time in the showroom. With the addition of the new Volvo facility on Birch Avenue, Spirit Motor
Volvo ambassadors Isa Nacewa, Josh Van Der Flier and Jordi Murphy outside the spectacular new Sandymount showroom
Group will extend its presence in Sandyford and will support 20 jobs, bringing the total number of people employed by Spirit Motor Group to 200. Current staff from the existing Volvo showroom on Arena Road will transfer to the new facility, and will be led by the new management team of dealer principal John Ryan, and service director, Robbie Bolger.
An authorised Volvo Retailer since 2004, Spirit Motor Group is a wellestablished car retail business in South Dublin, representing a number of brands in the area. Jaguar, Land Rover, Volvo, Ford and Skoda each have their own showrooms across six different locations between Sandyford and Baldonnell. In addition, Spirit Premium, also in Sandyford, and Spirit Burton, in near-
by Kilpedder, Co Wicklow, offer select ranges of pre-owned vehicles prepared to the highest standard. Alan Moore, operations director of Spirit Motor Group said: “We are delighted to be launching our newVolvo facility after many years working with the brand. We believe this is a fitting home and destination for the exciting new range of Volvo cars. Not only that,
but our newworkshop facility represents the very latest in Volvo diagnostics and technology and our service customers can now have a fully immersive experience in being able to see this work being done while they wait. “This expansion further strengthens Spirit Motor Group’s presence in South Dublin and is in line with our plans for the strategic growth and development of our business. We look forward to welcoming customers old and new to our new showroom and after sales centre where we will continue to provide the very best service to all our loyal Volvo customers.” Spirit Motor Group is the first dealership in Ireland to launch the new global Volvo Retail Experience facility. Volvo ambassadors including, RTE’s Dermot Bannon, Leinster Rugby players Isa Nacewa, Josh Van Der Flier and Jordi Murphy and Josepha Madigan TD were in attendance.
GAZETTE
24 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 23 March 2017
DUBLINLIFE
! M A comic BHow
CINEMA
ANALYSIS: EXPLORING THE RISE AND RISE OF POPULAR GENRE FILMS
You can expect Guardians of the Galaxy: Volume 2 to be top tog – or top alien – at the cinema in Summer The first film was a surprise hit, but struck a chord with fans looking for an upbeat space opera
book heroes got into the mainstream WITH 2008’s Iron Man, Marvel struck upon a winning formula for cinematic super hero adaptations; a scientific formula for printing money, one might say, and one they’ve adhered to as if it were religious doctrine ever since. After all, if it ain’t broke (and continues smashing box office records), don’t fix it. In all those years, the comic book giant has hardly put a foot wrong (we’ll forgive 2008’s big, green, angry, gamma-radiated misstep), all thanks to that winning formula. And what exactly is that formula’s unassailable composition? Epic opening battles, magical McGuffins, affable characters with relatable motivations despite their fantastical situations, great big dollops of humour and, apart from the odd “PG-13” moment, some good, wholesome family entertainment – this is now a Disney cinematicuniverse, after all. Ignoring the occasional dissenting voice, it’s rare that the studio is hit with
MARTIN MACNAMARA
anything other than critical and commercial success. Looking back on 1986’s Howard The Duck, the publisher’s first proper foray into theatrical filmmaking (and commonly considered as one of the worst films ever made), this is a near-unbelievable success story. While Marvel Studios may have given new life to a dying genre, there are those growing weary of their immutable approach. These naysayers herald its proliferation as the death knell of modern movie-making, decrying cooker-cutter plot after cookie-cutter plot. The creative minds at DC Comics and Warner Bros chose a different path, going for darker than dark grit with their own “expanded universe” churning out flop after
critical flop with Man of Steel, Batman Vs Superman: Dawn of Justice and last year’s great, big star-studded abomination, Suicide Squad. It seems DC will never manage to ape Marvel’s success, let alone recapture the magic of Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy. However, On the other side of the Marvel cinematic divide, 20th Century Fox have taken the brave step of appealing to those dissenting voices, achieving the seeminglyunachievable with last year’s Deadpool adaptation – the most successful R-rated movie ever made, grossing $746 million at the box office. Giving the people what the people want, Fox applied a similarly goresoaked, swear-heavy coat of paint to this month’s Logan, directed by James Mangold. While not the superhero masterpiece some critics claim it to be, Logan demonstrates how a darker, more mature approach can still capture the super-
hero essence of the comic book, showing DC how it’s done. 2017 is already shaping up to be a very different year for comic book movies, then. Marvel’s most recent endeavor, Doctor Strange, hinted at what’s to come. While at its core it may have worn a similar path to previous offerings, Strange’s blend of action and aesthetic was the greatest leap forward Marvel have taken in years. T his year ’s Thor: Ragnarok , due for release in October, will be directed by Taika Waititi, who says the studio have allowed him to inject the film with all the offbeat character of his previous two films, What We Do in The Shadows (2014), and Hunt For the Wilderpeople (2016). The film takes elements from the bizarre, spaceopera “Planet Hulk” comic book story. Thor: Ragnarok won’t be Marvel’s only planethopping adventure this year. The studio first learned it could afford
Guardians was further proof that superhero films with ‘comic book sensibilities‛ can be wildly entertaining
Despite misfires such as Batman Vs Superman, genre films have largely been lucrative hits at the box office
There are high hopes for Wonder Woman to deliver a new franchise The Avengers films have been particularly successful for Marvel
Not every such film is a hit Sorry, Howard
to get a little out-there with the surprise success of 2014’s Guardians of The Galaxy, as long as they stuck to their triedand-tested recipe. April’s sequel to the film, Vol 2, again directed by James Gun, will see the Guardians return for more space-based madness. Spider-man: Homecoming, released in July, will rather unbelievably
make the bold move of depicting the web-slinger as an actual teenager, making the notion of yet another reboot for the series a bit more intriguing. On the DC side, June’s Wonder Woman will be the first female-led superhero movie since 2005’s Elektra, and the powers that be at Warner have already stated that
November’s Justice League will be a tonally lighter film that Zack Snyder’s other endeavours for the studio. With all these shakeups on the horizon, one can’t argue that the industry isn’t taking criticism on board. If anything, 2017 will be a game-changer for comic books movies – an exciting prospect, to say the least.
23 March 2017 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 25
GAZETTE
GAMING
At least much of the gaming itself was well organised, with YouTube stars also giving some great insights, and networked and competitive eSports proving popular
The huge numbers that attended GamerCon underscored that there’s certainly a great appetite for more gaming events here. Photos: Shane Dillon
GAMERCON: WHAT WENT RIGHT – AND SO WRONG – AT THE BUSY EVENT
Lines of reproach for jam-packed gathering SHANE DILLON
LAST weekend’s GamerCon at the National Convention Centre (NCC) certainly made lots of headlines in Ireland and internationally – just not for the reasons organisers would have wanted, with widespread negative press and some damning social media criticisms almost completely overshadowing the two-day event itself. As a disclaimer, I was there for a few hours on Saturday, so I just saw how things worked that day – but the day was followed by pretty furious posts from people and parents slamming the event, while I also overheard several frazzled arguments.
Expected to be a great showcase for all things gaming and gaming culture-related, one can only ask: where did GamerCon go so wrong? Widespread reports have subsequently focused on the amount of tickets sold for the two-day event, versus the actual capacity of the NCC. It appears that organisers greatly underestimated the ‘flow’ of punters. If people were expected to come in for a while, look around and then leave the NCC, that’s not at all what happened – they were obviously intent on staying for hours, if not the day. The end result was that the NCC was soon full with a capacity crowd of
people who were reluctant to leave, perhaps because they wanted to see timetabled events at different times during the day, while more and more people kept joining the snaking queues outside. This long, long line of men, women and children was blasted by the gusting winds and driving drizzle in the wide exposed space all around the NCC, with some punters and NCC staff confirming to me that, at that stage, it was taking people about 2.5 hours to get in. Inside, more queues could be found for some events, with scattered seating and pretty basic food services for the thousands milling about inside compounding matters.
That’s not to say the event was a disaster – for example, a number of YouTubers and gamers were a hit in the main auditorium, which I popped in and out of repeatedly. It was clear that they were enjoying the banter, gameplay, audience interaction and so on – this was certainly a nicely organised and well-received aspect of GamerCon. Downstairs, and the eSports and networked gaming hubs were also a hit, but here capacity was also an issue. With eSports enjoying great audience support, there wasn’t enough seating for the numbers watching. As for the area with new game previews, VR pods, shopping, and other such
related gaming matters, the crowd was a crushing throng to rival Grafton Street on Christmas Eve, with – you guessed it – more queues also a feature. On the plus side, the huge numbers heading to GamerCon prove that there’s a still largely untapped hunger for and interest in gaming across Ireland. If thousands of all ages will queue for ages in truly terrible weather, that tells you how much of a foothold gaming has in modern life. As for how GamerCon could perhaps learn from the events of this year to make another such event run a bit smoother, see the panel, right.
Resetting GamerCon GAMERCON at the NCC showed that gamers – and their families – want to get their money’s worth, with pretty much all of the problems at the event stemming from the fact that people came along in their thousands – but then wouldn’t leave ... To avoid the knock-on problems that this caused (notably, the giant queues that developed outside, as shown above, and the crowd inside), a sensible solution could be to chop GamerCon into more staggered and better timetabled events. Selling tickets for clear half-day slots, say, with a gap for crowd dispersal and cleaning/restaging in the middle – and, crucially, only selling ticket allocations to comfortably match the venue’s capacity – would go a long way to avoiding the unfortunate issues arising from this year’s GamerCon, making it more enjoyable for all, and easier to control.
26 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 23 March 2017
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28 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 23 March 2017
SPORT
FastSport MCCRYSTAL BACK WITH A BANG: PARALYMPIAN Eve McCrystal returned to domestic action with a bang on Sunday, when sprinting for victory in round one of Cycling Ireland’s Women’s National Road Series. The Garda cycling club member led home the field at Condron Car Sales Des Hanlon Memorial Race in Carlow. It was a hardfought win and one the women’s peloton will have to get used to as, in the wake of her and Katie-George Dunlevy’s Rio 2016 gold and silver medals, the Garda CC rider’s focus has shifted. “Ras Na mBan is my big goal this year,” she said. “I haven’t looked past that, but with my schedule with Katie-George I actually only miss one National Road Series race. “It’s been nearly two years since I really rode in Ireland. There were a lot of new faces out there today, and I’m looking forward to the rest of the season.”
HOCKEY: LEINSTER SENIOR CUP GLORY HEADS TO WEST DUBLIN AFTER SHOOT-OUT
Keogh and Micklem shoot Glens to Mills Cup success
STEPHEN FINDLATER sport@dublingazette.com
DAVID Keogh and Leo Micklem were the toast of Glenanne as the duo combined to hand the Tallaght club their first Mills Cup title in nine years, beating a much-decorated Monkstown side in a pumped up tie. Keogh scored two audacious shoot-outs – one in the regulation first five, the other in sudden death – while goalkeeper Micklem made five quality saves to land the Leinster senior title. It came at the end of a fractious and dramatic battle in which Monkstown made the initial inroads but Glenanne roared back into contention in the closing quarter to finally forge an equaliser and, ultimately, shoot-out success. For Town, the match saw the return of David Fitzgerald from injury for the first time this season, stepping in for the work-tied Max Maguire who has donned the goalkeeping smock to date. He would play a major part in the drama later on, making numerous saves down the final stretch and, crucially, a stroke in the shoot-out. David Cole had set Monks-
Glenanne celebrate their Leinster Senior Mills Cup victory on St Patrick’s Day. Picture: Adrian Boehm
town on their way, scoring from a corner won by Kyle Good in the 12th minute. Eddie O’Malley equalised quickly, turning home after Gary Shaw nabbed the ball on the 23m line and laid on a pass for Stu Ronan to coolly square for a tap-in. The cards started flowing then, Karl Smith’s yellow for a slide-tackle was followed by Jason Lynch’s green to put Town down to nine for a spell while
decisions were over-turned on a couple of occasions for dissent. Back to 11, Town got back in front on the half-hour from another corner with Cole again shooting home low. There was a touch of controversy to it as Ross Quirke appeared to take a few steps into the circle before the injection which usually leads to a reset corner if spotted. Glenanne’s complaints were turned away.
The sky-blues continued to have the edge in the early phases of the second half as Davy Carson and Good piled forward with menace. Glenanne survived a Stephen Brownlow yellow card suspension before fighting back with Sam O’Connor pushing things on from the back while Keogh and Richard Couse became more and more influential. After a couple of corner
chances went awry and a penalty stroke was awarded and then annulled – for a supposed foul on O’Connor by Fitzgerald, sparking manic protestations – the Glens levelled from their fifth corner via Brownlow’s drag with six minutes to go. Clive Kennedy and Neil Byrne went close to winning it in normal time and their wait for glory was prolonged further when the shoot-out yielded only one goal from either side from the first five rounds. This included a Gary Shaw that rolled over the line but only to be beaten by the eight-second whistle while a subsequent stroke from Brownlow was kept out by Fitzgerald. Carson put Town 1-0 up in the fourth round but Keogh levelled with an ice-cool push early on from top D before the keeper could set himself. It meant sudden death where Carson repeated his trick on the reverse, tying up O’Connor’s goal. Keogh, though, crowned the day with a second perfect finish, this time on the backhand, before Micklem denied Kyle Good to spark the celebrations in earnest.
Maher touches down for epic Belvo cup retention sport@dublingazette.com
Belvedere College celebrate their Senior Cup success
BELVEDERE College were taken all the way to the last play before finally landing back-toback Bank of Ireland Leinster Schools Senior Cup titles with a 10-3 win over Blackrock College at the RDS on St Patrick’s Day. It was tight and tense throughout with Belvedere’s David Hawkshaw putting the kick-off into touch on the full perhaps a sign of nerves. Nonetheless, his handling and football nous created space for Belvo and he played an influen-
tial role. Indeed, his kicking game was beginning to have an influence, never more so than when Hawkshaw grubbered the ball through. Full-back Tom Roche could not tame the awkward bounce and Peter Maher was on the spot to touchdown the only try of the day for Hugh O’Sullivan to make it 7-0 in their 23rd minute. This was extended when Blackrock hooker Stephen McLoughlin was whistled in a borderline call at the ruck for O’Sullivan to stitch on three points in the 27th minute, 10-0 at the break.
It was a long way back from there given the difficulties underfoot. Blackrock got a foothold when centre Liam Turner forced a penalty out of Jordan Wilkes on the floor and out-half Peter O’Reilly slotted the points in the 38th minute. In something of a slog, Hawkshaw made a couple of key rips out of Rock hands in the tackle as the southside school tried to force the issue. It kept the tie in the balance deep into the second half and Rock set up a rousing closing phase when full-back Tom Roche
completed a superb turnover. He backed this up with a strong burst through the middle where flanker Doran drove into contact to cause a penalty turnover. The clock was the enemy of Blackrock and it would take something magical to break down a special defence. There was time for one last play. Blackrock kept the ball with consummate professionalism, driving relentlessly to the line where Clarkson was heroically held up by Max Kearney to signal the end of the game.
23 March 2017 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 29
GAZETTE
FASTSport
Van Gelderen targets record speed in France
Decorated Loughshinny man looking to break new barriers as he takes up a special three-week challenge at Salins de la Palme at a windsurfing course designed for fast speeds sport@dublingazette.com
Dublin’s Dunne and Doda pick up RILSA awards RILSA, the Irish ladies’ snooker association, held their second annual awards ceremony in The Teach Domain, Carlow earlier this month, with National Secretary Tina Keogh handing out awards for the year’s competition, including two to Dublin players. Cathy Dunne, currently ranked second in RILSA’s Irish ladies rankings, took home the award for the Most Consistent Player throughout the season, having returned to the circuit over the last couple of years. Dunne has represented Ireland on several occasions internationally over the years, and was absent from the RILSA circuit for a number of years before bursting back onto the scene in 2015. Her impact was immediate as she took home three consecutive ranking events in the 2015 season. She took the inaugural RILSA International Irish Intermediate Open at Joey’s in Dublin in 2015, returning again in 2016 to go one better to reach the final of the main event. This season, Dunne won the Maureen Butler Cup and was runner up in the season-long RILSA contest, ranking second over the course of the year. Emirjeta Doda, pictured above with Koegh, took home the Junior Player of the Year Award, having been competitive at junior level since she joined RILSA back in 2014, at the very inauguration of the organisation’s junior program. She won the inaugural RILSA Under-21 championship in 2014 and reached the final again in 2015. The 2016/17 season saw Doda regain her Under-21 title at Joey’s. Doda is once again the number one ranked junior player on the circuit this year, and is making a consistent impact on the senior ranks, too, where she ranked three in 2014/15, and has remained in the top six over the course of every season since. RILSA representatives also recently attended the Teaming Up For Women’s Sports event at Griffith College with dominant player Annette Newman joining Louise Quinn (Irish soccer international) and Ellen Keane (Paralympic swimming medalist from Rio) to discuss collective ways to progress women’s sport in Ireland.
T WENT Y-seven time Irish windsurfing champion Oisin van Gelderen, from Loughshinny in the north county, joined the fastest windsurfers in the world in a bid to break the windsurfing speed world record this week at a newly designed speed course at Salins de la Palme, in the south of France. The Irish GPS Speed Record Holder qualified for a wildcard invitation to the event, based on his previous speeds and potential to perform. Being invited to join the fastest windsurfers in the world at a specialised location is the windsurfing equivalent of being invited to play in the Croke Park
final, or a golf major. His aim is to use the opportunity to break his own personal best speeds and smash the 50 knot barrier (92.6kph), and set a new official Irish Speed Record over 500 metres – ratified by the World Sailing Speed Records Council. The world record challenge runs for seven weeks until the end of April, and van Gelderen’s bid lasts for the first three weeks. To date, he has experienced moderate wind conditions for the start of the challenge, which has given good training runs but nothing near a record. For now, all the windsurfers wait for the Tramontana to properly show it’s full force, and then the hope is that records will
fall. To that end, van Gelderen achieved 40.09 knots on Saturday. The Irish record is currently 40.44 knots, meaning he is within close range of that record. The wind where he is, is a bit tricky as it’s currently blowing from the wrong direction, but that will change in the coming weeks. T he current windsur fing speed world record, held by Frenchman Antoine Albeau (France), stands at 53.27knots (98.65kph)
over 500metres, which was set at purpose built speed canal in Luderitz, Namibia. This country is currently home to all the fastest speeds in the world – in both windsurfing and kitesurfing – and the outright sailing speed world record by Australian Sailor Paul Larsen who, in a custom build carbon fibre boat, blew everyone else away with a speed of 65.45knots (121.21kph). The La Palme course in France, is the brainchild of UK windsurfer Erik Beale, who in 1988
Oisin van Gelderen is one of Ireland’s leading windsurfers and is looking to break the national record in France.
became the first sailor (of any kind) in history to break 40 knot barrier. With his vast experience, he sourced out potential locations that could provide world record breaking conditions, and found a location in France that could provide the essential combination of gale force wind and very flat water. The Tramontana wind howls offshore throughout this part of France and the course itself is set in a salt marsh just inland of the Mediterranean, close to Leucate.
GAZETTE
30 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 23 March 2017
SPORT
FASTSport
SOCCER: UCD PLAYER NAMED THE FAI WOMEN’S PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Wesley celebrate 125th anniversary in top style OLD Wesley celebrated its 125th birthday in style with a dinner dance held on the eve of St Patrick’s Day in the Ballsbridge Hotel, Dublin. The event, attended by 400 members and friends, was a huge success to fittingly commemorate a great milestone. To embellish the night, there was a very entertaining questions and answers session, compered by club member and 45 times international rugby referee, Alan Lewis, pictured above on the right with Old Wesley club president David Pierce. During this, Lewis provided had some very interesting and lively exchanges with former Irish international and British & Irish Lion Mick Galwey, who held his own very well during his “head to head” with former English international and Lion, Martin Corry MBE. With many old friendships being renewed on the night, the excellent MC Alan Short held a number of impromptu interviews with many of the club’s former greats, with some great anecdotes being shared. The music on the night was provided by Dark Horses and the Henshaw family, who sent the attendance home in very good spirits.
Walker and Carr play part in Irish hockey success THREE Rock Rovers duo Ben Walker and Jamie Carr were both part of the Irish hockey team that won gold at the World League Round 2 in Stormont last week, putting them through to the final round of the qualifcation process for the 2018 World Cup. Seventeen-year-old Walker was a last minute call-up to the squad, receiving his call-up on the eve
of the tournament while in French class at school as a late replacement for the injured John Jermyn. Walker scored a day later in the 9-2 win over Ukraine and he also netted in the crucial 3-1 win over Wales in the semi-final. Ireland went on to win the final against France in a shoot-out after normal time had ended 1-1 with fellow Dubliner Shane O’Donoghue scoring the key goal in normal time. The next phase of qualification takes place in South Africa in July.
Karen Duggan, UCD Waves, is presented with her player of the year award by Irish manager Colin Bell. Picture: Brendan Moran/Sportsfile
Duggan on crest of a Wave sport@dublingazette.com
UCD Waves star Karen Duggan was honoured at the FAI International Football Awards after she lef t Donnybrook last weekend as the new senior women’s player of the year. T h e 2 5 - y e a r- o l d , who has also played for Peamount United, was nominated for the award alongside current UCD teammate Aine O’Gorman, and former Peamount teammate Stephanie Roche. She spoke afterwards about how delighted, yet surprised, she was
to win. “It’s a complete shock, I’m absolutely honoured. “Every time that I get the jersey, I’m playing to get it back the next day. “ I ’m n o t l o o k i n g towards receiving awards, but it is a huge honour to play for your country and get recognised it. It is something you dream about when you are young.” Duggan had to bide her time before she got a chance to nail down a place for the Irish senior team but it proved worth the wait for herself and the country. “I think I probably
STAR ATTRACTIONS Harrington intent on playing at Irish Open STACKSTOWN’S Padraig Harrington has been
confirmed alongside Shane Lowry as one of the star attractions to play in this year’s Dubai Duty Free Irish Open, hosted by the Rory Foundation, which takes place at Portstewart Golf Club from July 6-9. Harrington recently underwent surgery on a troublesome neck injury in order to maximise his chances of success in an exciting summer schedule which also includes the return of The Open Championship to Royal Birkdale, where he successfully defended the Claret Jug in 2008.
hold the title for the longest apprenticeship served on the bench but when I got that chance to step up to the starting 11, I’m just working towards getting back in the next day, and the day after that. “There is huge competition for places, which is helping me to improve my game. “It has been a long road but it makes it all worth it to be part of something like this,” said Duggan. Another winner on Sunday was former St Kevin’s Boys prodigy, and Irish hero, Rob-
bie Brady. The Burnley midfielder-cum-fullback won no less than three awards as he was honoured for his superb performances at Euro 2016 in France. T he Dubliner won player of the year and young player of the year after scoring twice in France – including the late winning goal against Italy that won the award for goal of the year. Brady beat off stiff competition for the top prize in the form of Seamus Coleman and Jeff Hendrick, which he acknowledged at the
ceremony. “I’ve been fortunate enough on this one; the other two nominees had fantastic years. I’m honoured to have just pipped them, but it’s a massive honour for me and for my family,” said Brady. Shelbourne Ladies star Roma McLauglin picked up the award for Under-19 player of the year ahead of Lucy McCartan and Amanda McQuillan. The Donegal woman is a new signing at Shels h av i n g m ove d f r o m Dublin rivals Peamount United.
23 March 2017 DUNDRUM GAZETTE 31
GAZETTE
LAURA LYNN CYCLE
Kilmacud crew raise over €2,000 for charity
CLUB NOTICEBOARD BALLINTEER ST JOHN’S
KILMACUD Crokes enjoyed a great turnout
for their annual cycle last Saturday in aid of Laura Lynn which raised in excess of €2,000. Kevin Mulligan and Mick Culligan’s 50km Challenge Cyclists had a trip to Howth while Bomber Greene’s gang ventured south to Wicklow. All cyclists were treated to a feast of delicious food in Wicklow thanks to Mary Greene, Gaye Byrne and Anne Foley.
LOTTO results (March 16): number
Well done Cuala on your All-Ireland
drawn were 4, 15, 18 and 21. The jackpot
club hurling success. Membership fees
next week is €1,800; €100 Breda Maher,
now due. Online registration and Easter
€50 Tom Coleman and Gus c/o Ballinteer
Camp available on the club website. Remembrance Mass for the late Wil-
House and Jackie O Connor. Bingo continues every Monday at 8pm; Mary Fairweather was the winner of the
lie O’Connor in Whitefriar St Church on Thursday, March 23 at 5.30pm. Weekend results: hurling success at
Bingo Joker prize.
FOOTBALL: LATE 12 MINUTE BLITZ OVERTURNS DEFICIT
Congrats to Kieran Brennan recipient
U-13, 14 and 16s. The junior A football-
of the inaugural St Joseph’s GAA Laois
ers beat Ballyboden and the Bs beat St
Hall of Fame award.
Mary’s in the league.
KILMACUD CROKES WELL done to the Dublin senior football-
AFL9 team who had a great win over St
ers who drew with Kerry over the week-
Pat’s Palmerstown with the score finish-
end, 13 points apiece, after a late equal-
ing up 5-20 to 2-6. Hard luck to the MHL1 team who were
iser by Paul Mannion. Well done to Cian O’Sullivan who also featured in the game. Hard luck to the Dublin senior ladies
beaten by St Vincent’s, 3-18 to 2-7, and the MHL3 team who lost to Naomh Olaf, 1-11 to 1-7.
footballers who lost to Armagh, 3-5
Well done to the minor A camogie team
to 3-12, in the league. Aoife Kane, Molly
who had a great 2-5 to 0-2 win over
Lamb and Lauren Magee all played in the
Castleknock. Congrats to all who took part in the
game.
Ballyboden St Enda’s got the best of Thomas Davis last weekend. Picture: LC Photos
Keaney and Molony point way for Boden AFL DIVISION ONE Ballyboden St Enda’s Thomas Davis sport@dublingazette.com
0-18 0-10
B A L LY B O D E N S t Enda’s produced a stunning closing 12 minutes to turn a one-point deficit into a resounding victory at Sancta Maria in challenging conditions. Thomas David led by four points at half-time and still had a narrow advantage going into the closing quarter before Boden ran up a string of scores to give the final outcome a slightly deceptive look.
The visitors chose to play with the wind in the first half and, after an early trade of points, the Kiltipper side began to make headway. Davis’s scores came from long range while Boden had to work the ball in and shoot from close to get their scores. It was a tight contest with both teams not giving up any goal chances. However, the last ten minutes of the first half saw Davis’s open up a four-point lead with some excellent point taking – particularly from Paul Hudson – building a 0-9 to 0-5
advantage. At half-time, the Boden management asked the players to up the intensity and that’s exactly what they did. They exerted more pressure on Davis’s plays and forced several turnover balls with former county star Declan O’Mahony a big addition while Ryan Basquel also weighed in with key interventions. Boden started to pick off some excellent scores and by mid-way through the second half they had levelled the score. Howe ve r, T h o m a s
Davis had not gone away and had it not been for a fine save by Josh Kane, Boden could have fallen behind again. B u t B o d e n n e ve r looked back after this point and, they kicked on with some fine scores and eventually ran out comfor table winners by eight points with Conal Keaney and Sam Molony landing eight between them. Next week sees Ballyboden play at home to Oliver Plunkett’s in the cup and then, in two weeks’ time, they are out against St Vincent’s, away, in the league.
In the Leinster Hurling League, hard
annual St Patrick’s day charity cycle
luck to the senior A hurlers who lost to
with KC Wheelers. The group raised
Oulart The Ballagh in their group game.
€2,000 for Laura Lynn.
In the Dublin football leagues, well done
Well done also to the Kick Start Crokes
to the AFL3 team who had a good win
cycle group who completed their final
over Garda, 1-12 to 0-9.
week’s cycle with a trip to Howth over
The AFL4 team drew with Man O War,
the summit. Congrats to everyone
2-5 to 0-11, while the AFL8 team were well
who took part in eight-week Kickstart
beaten by St Finian’s. Well done to the
Crokes program across all the events.
NAOMH OLAF CONGRATULATIONS to all who played any
the second team compensated with a
part, big or small, in Naomh Olaf’s par-
good win. The U-15 and U-16 hurlers also won,
ticipation in the Stepaside St Patrick’s Day Parade.
this being the U-16s second of two suc-
It was a great display from the club,
cesses. The minor B camogie team had a
culminating in being awarded the best
great win, visiting Lucan Sarsfields, one
float in the parade pennant.
of the strongest clubs in Dublin.
Another very good weekend on the
Our ladies’ senior footballers qualified
playing fields for Naomh Olaf. Clara
for the Floodlit Cup final, beating Crumlin
O’Sullivan and the Dublin minor football-
in the semi-final in midweek. Well done to
ers top the list, beating Longford.
all involved with these teams – keep it
The senior and junior 2 footballers had
going. Best wishes to John O’Shea and
fine wins. The minor hurlers had a good win in a local derby v Kilmacud Crokes. Two of three U-11 football teams won
Michelle Queally who were married in Co Clare at the weekend. The lotto was not won; €2,100 is the
while the U-12s enjoyed a clean sweep. While one U-13 hurling team was beaten,
jackpot next week so get your ticket.
BALLYBODEN ST ENDA’S THERE was no winner of this week’s
U-14 hurling/ camogie/football/ladies
jackpot. Match first three winners were
football teams (girls and boys born in
Elaine O’Reilly, Moyville, Rathfarnham
2003, 2004 and 2005) and takes place
and Richard Connell, Woodfield, Schol-
from Monday, April 10 to Thursday, April
arstown Road, Knocklyon.
13.
Congratulations to all our teams who
The Boden Theatre Group proudly
were victorious at the weekend includ-
presents John B Keane’s play The Field
ing the minor hurlers, senior football-
this coming March. The group will per-
ers and our senior hurlers who played
form this iconic Irish play in the club hall
Gowran and in the Leinster League and
from Tuesday, March 28 to Friday, March
played a scoreline of 1-17 a piece.
31 at 8pm each night. Be sure to reserve
The Easter School of Excellence is open to any club player on our U-12 to
your tickets (€10) early by calling Carol on 086 4070015.
GAZETTESPORT
ALL OF YOUR DUNDRUM SPORTS COVERAGE FROM PAGE 28-31
CREST OF A WAVE: UCD’s Duggan honoured with FAI women’s senior player of the year award for 2016 P30
MARCH 23-29, 2017
LEINSTER HOCKEY HEROICS: Glenanne end theirlong wait for senior cup glory P28
Cuala raise the Tommy Moore Cup in Croke Park last Friday
Cuala save best til last Mattie Kenny hails John Sheanon’s immense marking job on Tony Kelly while Colm Cronin flags 20 years of Trojan work to land All-Ireland glory
JAMES HENDICOTT
sport@dublingazette.com
CUALA returned to Dalkey on Friday night to enjoy a St Patrick’s Day that will be forever etched into the memory, after the club comfortably won the biggest game in their history to become All-Ireland club hurling champions. Boss Mattie Kenny, already linked to county jobs off the back of his achievements this year, worked wonders in his tactics, shutting down star Ballyea man Tony Kelly and getting the better of a tight forward battle to see the side home by 2-19 to 1-10. After the match, Kenny said: “it’s an unbelievable feeling. We’re very proud, very happy.
“It’s a huge day for everyone in the south Dublin region and everyone in Dublin hurling. “We were expecting a huge battle form Ballyea, and we got that. Like a lot of games at Croke Park, it hinged on a couple of crucial scores. The goal in the first half kind of settled down the team, and we got a few points after that, so we took a lead into the dressing room at halftime. That gave us our platform for the second half.” Kenny singled out John Sheanon in particular for the job he did in keeping Clare man Kelly quiet, saying: “John is a great hurler as well as a great man marker. He got a point in the first half that was a testament to the player he is. “Tony Kelly is an outstanding hurler, one
of the best hurlers in Ireland, and we’re very proud of all our players, but John should be very proud of how he handled himself out there today.” “It should give a big boost to Dublin hurling. There’s a lot of good players there, and it’s definitely going to give a lift to the squad and to Ger Cunningham,” he continued. Cuala hosted a huge reception in Hyde Road for the side on Friday night, bringing back the Tommy Moore Cup on a stage in front of hundreds of fans in their Dalkey home. A sign of the players’ class came in a moment spent with the Under-9s in celebration, encouraging the youngsters for the future. Colm Cronin later said the club had “saved
their best ‘til last,” calling the Croke Park display “our best performance all year.” Cronin thanked Kenny for his three years in charge of the club to get them to this stage but added that the achievement is the culmination of “Trojan work going back 20 years. “Many of those involved were up in the stands. We were the lucky ones who got to play the final.” Many of the Cuala players will return to a Dublin side that has looked shaky without them over the coming weeks, battling to keep them in the top tier of county hurling. While speculation about a bigger, county job for Kenny rumbles on in the background, the celebrations won’t fully subside for some time.