Dublin Airport has hidden space for a metro station. Why was it never opened?

Dublin Airport’s ghost metro station and other infrastructure mysteries

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DUBLIN AIRPORT, CHECK-IN AREA 14 FIT OUT PJ Hegarty Construction/DAA
DUBLIN AIRPORT, CHECK-IN AREA 14 FIT OUT PJ Hegarty Construction/DAA

When a taxi driver told Irish Times economics correspondent Eoin Burke-Kennedy that there was a ghost train station under Terminal 1 in Dublin Airport he was intrigued.

The architects who designed the terminal in the late 1960s were smart enough to future-proof it – to incorporate into their plan a vast underground train station because, surely it wouldn’t be long before a metro would connect the airport with the city centre.

Their thinking was right – but they didn’t reckon with Ireland’s sluggish planning system and an endemic failure to plan for and then build key infrastructure projects.

This was long before the stop-start Metro North/MetroLink project came along, which is already 20 years in the planning without a track being laid. And even if the metro ever happens, the proposed airport stop is not under Terminal 1.

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As Burke-Kennedy tells In the News, Area 14 is a metaphor for so much that is wrong with Ireland’s approach to key infrastructure projects, from housing to energy supply, transport to health.

Planning for a bigger population is something most states, but Ireland particularly, seem to fall down on.

Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Aideen Finnegan.

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