The Walrus Chair by Maximo Riera: he of the Octopus Chair.
This, and other pieces from Riera’s ‘Animal Chairs’ collection go on show at the 100% Design Exhibition in London from the 22nd to the 25th of this month.
The Walrus Chair by Maximo Riera: he of the Octopus Chair.
This, and other pieces from Riera’s ‘Animal Chairs’ collection go on show at the 100% Design Exhibition in London from the 22nd to the 25th of this month.
Frank McDonald, of the Irish Times, shares with readers of the Daily Telegraph tomorrow some of the “sad and salutory” lessons Ireland’s relaxed planning laws have forced upon us. Including…
The knock-on effects of liberal planning policies over several decades, codified by the Sustainable Rural Housing Guidelines (2005), have been ruinous not just for the countryside, but also for towns and villages; as residential development spreads outwards, many are losing population rather than being reinforced..
This imbalance in Ireland became even more pronounced during the “Celtic Tiger” boom, with suburban-style housing estates being tacked on to towns and villages as well as being built in the middle of nowhere, as more and more land was re-zoned for residential development – at the behest of farmers and other landowners greedy for rich pickings.
The farmers also did very well from selling off land, at hugely inflated prices, for inter-urban motorways that became the sinews of sprawl because they enabled so many people to live in rural areas and commute to work by car. Notoriously, Dublin’s commuter belt now extends to 100 kilometres – roughly on a par with Los Angeles.
Eventually, housing output reached a peak of 90,000 new homes per year – far more than Britain’s, despite the huge difference in population (4.5 million versus 60 million). Local councils also behaved recklessly by zoning more than 105,600 acres for residential development between 2000 and 2010 – enough to accommodate 1.5 million new houses or apartments. It transpired that only 29,660 acres were needed to meet demand throughout the republic over the decade.
Jebus.
McDonald’s article elicited this rather bracing analysis on the Telegraph site at around 12.13am. Drink may have been taken.
(Pic of Kildare train station: unknown photographer)
Australia v Ireland – Match Stats:
All-time record: 29; Ireland won 8, Australia won 20, one match drawn
Biggest winning margin: Aus: 36, 46-10 at Brisbane, 1999; Ire: 15, 27-12 at Brisbane, 1979
Highest score: Aus: 36, 46-10 at Brisbane, 1999; Ire: 15, 27-12at Brisbane, 1979
Most tries: Aus: 6, 46-10 at Brisbane, 1999, 45-16 at Perth, 2003, 33-13 at Brisbane 1994; Ire: 3, 26-32 at Perth, 1999
Most points (individual): Aus: 64 Michael Lynagh; Ire: 68 Ronan O’Gara
Most tries (individual): Aus: 4 David Campese, Chris Latham; Ire: 3 Brian O’Driscoll
Most points in a Test: Aus: 20 Elton Flatley, Perth 2003; Ire: 19 Ollie Campbell, Brisbane 1979
Previous World Cup meetings: Four (Aus 33-15, Sydney, 1987; Aus 19-18 Ire, Dublin, 1991; Aus 23-3 Ire, Dublin, 1999; Aus 17-16 Ire, Melbourne, 2003)
The OECD says a “near negligible amount” of time is devoted to modern foreign languages in the Republic, compared to other EU states where it accounts for 9 per cent of instruction time.
By contrast, 10 per cent of compulsory teaching time was devoted to religion in the Republic, the second highest (after Israel) among the countries surveyed.
Brandon Wright was riding east on U.S. Highway 89 about 11:40 a.m., when a driver steered his BMW 530XI into the motorcycle’s path from a parking lot across the street from the Utah State University campus, said Assistant Logan Police Chief Jeff Curtis. The driver of the BMW did not see Wright, who laid down his bike and slid into the car.
The motorcycle and Wright were pulled under the car, where the motorcycle’s gas line was severed, causing the bike and the car to catch fire while he was trapped underneath, Curtis said.
At which point, several fearless bystanders sprang into action.
Bystanders lift burning car to rescue injured motorcyclist in Logan (The Salt Lake Tribune)