What’s the best way to tell area residents about plans for a new asylum shelter nearby?
The government should tell communities directly about plans for new asylum shelters, some activists and politicians say.
Dublin water sports on a budget? Row out with East Wall’s curraching club.
From June until September, picnickers will descend on Smithfield Square each Sunday in an attempt to liven up the often barren plaza.
Pushing aside the classics to make way for his show has been called cultural vandalism, but he says we should be celebrating, not moaning.
Barricade Inn has been squatted since March by a new anarchist collective hoping to create a radical, autonomous social center and infoshop. The bike shop is just one of its services.
The Dublin dining scene hasn’t been a particularly dog-friendly one. Slowly but surely, thanks to places like the Dog House Blue’s Tearoom, that seems to be changing.
The Irish Innocence Project is hosting Dublin’s first Wrongful Convictions Film Festival at Griffith College on Saturday 27 June.
There are about 21,000 applicants on the social housing list in Dublin, and no plans to build enough homes for them. Here are the stories of two, who have been drifting, rootless, for years, hoping against hope.
Put the cans away. With the upcoming Gin & Tonic Fest and a new Dublin gin down the line, the city looks set for some classy summer tipple.
Given the severity of the homelessness problem, direct actions are beginning to emerge as a response.
Councillor John Lyons talks about life as a newbie local politician, Inkgate and, of course, Irish Water.
Is Dublin ready for them? At the end of the three months the question will be answered: can a fully-fledged vegan eatery survive here?