Dart-type rail for Cork ‘doable in 5 to 10 years’, says Taoiseach

The Taoiseach said that while the light-rail Luas system has “worked extremely well in Dublin”, he felt that a Dart-type model would work better in Cork.
Dart-type rail for Cork ‘doable in 5 to 10 years’, says Taoiseach

A computer-generated image of the Cork LUAS system as part of the CMATS. The Taoiseach said while the light rail LUAS system has “worked extremely well in Dublin”, and he would like to see more of it, he felt that a Dart-type model would work better in Cork.

A Dart-type transport system for Cork is achievable in the next five to 10 years, the Taoiseach has said.

A €1bn light-rail system was proposed for Ireland’s second city in the Cork Metropolitan Area Transport Strategy.

It proposed the development of a high-capacity, high-frequency public transport link from the eastern to the western suburbs of Cork — including a number of significant destinations, such as the Cork Institute of Technology (CIT), Cork University Hospital (CUH), University College Cork (UCC), Cork City centre, and Kent Station.

At his end-of-year media briefing, Leo Varadkar was asked whether it was something he would consider, if it were brought to Cabinet in 2024.

The Taoiseach said that while the light-rail Luas system has “worked extremely well in Dublin”, he felt that a Dart-type model would work better in Cork.

“The priority, certainly in Cork, is the Cork Metropolitan Rail,” he said.

“So you’ll know that we’re double-tracking around Midleton and there’s proposals for a whole new set of stations around Cork.

“So I would say the priority, in of public transport in Cork, is, I suppose, BusConnects.

“It’s also the Cork Metropolitan Rail, which is upgrading the existing train service on the existing lines and putting in new stations, sort of a Cork Dart, if you like. And I think that’s probably something more achievable in the medium term.”

He added: “We have the railway order already for the double tracking to Midleton, so having a heavy rail, Dart-type system for Cork is genuinely achievable in the next five to 10 years, and I think that’s what we should be aiming to do.”

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