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First renovations begin on Aran Island heritage centre as planning permission is put forward

First renovations begin on Aran Island heritage centre as planning permission is put forward

The current building was once the former coastguard station and was built in 1875. The site sits north of the village of Cill Rónain, the village Garda station, fire station, and post office – an approximate 10-minute walk from the ferry docks.
As the building is a protected structure, improvements are being planned to make it more fit for purpose while preserving its original historical character.
A new lift and stairs will be added to a self-contained portion of the internal structure will be separate from the heritage site so not to build into the 150-year-old building.
Internal renovations to the café and visitor centre will include updated signage and a new seating layout, as well as a replacement of windows throughout. Because the existing wastewater treatment system is undersized and no longer fit for purpose, the planning application also requests its replacement.
Confirmed by Údarás na Gaeltachta, this planning application is part of the works funded by the €3 million given to build a new visitor centre on Inis Mór called 'Árainn – Place of Stone Visitor Centre'.
Plans for the new centre according to Fáilte Ireland and Údarás na Gaeltachta include an immersive visitor attraction celebrating the Irish language and cultural heritage of the Island the Irish Independent reported last year.
The funding was intended to provide a café, visitor orientation area, and changing facilities, with the centre's new 'cutting-edge' vision aimed at encouraging longer stays on the island and extending the overall tourist season.
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The unlikely story of Bianconi: the enterprising Italian who developed Ireland's first proper bus service
The unlikely story of Bianconi: the enterprising Italian who developed Ireland's first proper bus service

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timean hour ago

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The unlikely story of Bianconi: the enterprising Italian who developed Ireland's first proper bus service

'Forty years ago a person going to Dublin from the interior should make almost as much preparation as some now make for America', commented topographer Rev. G. Hansbrow in 1835. Carlo Bianconi admitted to being 'the greatest dunce' at school. Instead of doing his homework, the boy with curly black hair preferred watching the slowly turning wheel of his father's silk-mill, and dreamed of owning 'much land' and 'many white horses'. Born in Tregolo, near Lake Como, on September 24, 1786, at the age of 16, he was apprenticed to art dealer Andrea Faroni. Treasuring in his luggage a blue peacock feather from girlfriend, Giovanna Vandroni, he was taken with three other lads to Dublin, and lodged in Temple Bar. Every Monday, Faroni would give him fourpence pocket money and send him out on the roads with a box (two feet long, one foot wide, eighteen inches deep, 100 pounds in weight) strapped to his back. 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Irish postage stamps commemorating the 200th anniversary of Charles Bianconi's birth, 1986 .png Scotsman John Anderson had introduced a mail coach service between Ireland's main towns in 1789, but it was expensive, and didn't have a regular timetable. Stiff road taxes meant only the rich could afford their own vehicle. Suddenly, after the Napoleonic Wars, a plentiful supply of strong horses came on the market. Bianconi bought some, and on July 6, 1815, started a one-horse, two-wheeled, six-passenger jaunting-car service between Clonmel and Cahir, a round trip of 18 miles. But most people were suspicious of any innovation, especially of 'travelling through the world sideways', and the initiative flopped. Instead of giving up, Bianconi bought a second car and arranged races with his original. It proved a masterstroke: passengers were thrilled, cars filled up. He quickly extended the service to Tipperary, Limerick, Cashel, Thurles, and in 1816 to Waterford. Ditching his picture business, he built a workshop and forges in Clonmel. Under the management of his assistant, Dan Hearn, a full range of vehicles was manufactured — from lightweight two-wheelers to carriages for 14 and 19 passengers. They drove voters to the Waterford election in 1826, earning Bianconi £1,000, and later secured him a Post Office contract to carry mail. By the mid-1830s, he owned around 100 carriages and 1,400 horses — reputedly knowing them all by name. His cars covered more than 3,000 miles of road across 23 counties, with routes stretching from Strabane to Skibbereen, Galway to Wexford. Tourists could explore magnificent Bantry Bay, the Lakes of Killarney, and the wilds of Connemara. With an average speed of 8-9 mph (including stops), any journey in Ireland could be completed in eight hours. At a modest penny-farthing per mile, all but the poor could afford to travel in them. 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'Proud of his hard-won success', he asked Minnie, his only surviving child, to write his biography. Carlo Bianconi died on 22 September 1875, following a stroke. As he lay dying, the story goes that his horses came to fetch him. A greatly respected and popular man, his funeral procession stretched over half a mile to the family mausoleum he'd built at Longfield House. In honour of the bicentenary of Bianconi's birth in 1986, Clonmel was twinned with Tregolo. Via Clonmel, Tregolo, twin of Tipperary's county town Bianconi would be dismayed to hear that the patchy state of Ireland's rural bus services is making headlines today, 150 years after his death. Wonder what solutions he'd come up with?

Galway TikTok star who handmade her wedding necklace marries fiance ‘straight off plane' from Australia
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First renovations begin on Aran Island heritage centre as planning permission is put forward
First renovations begin on Aran Island heritage centre as planning permission is put forward

Irish Independent

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

First renovations begin on Aran Island heritage centre as planning permission is put forward

The current building was once the former coastguard station and was built in 1875. The site sits north of the village of Cill Rónain, the village Garda station, fire station, and post office – an approximate 10-minute walk from the ferry docks. As the building is a protected structure, improvements are being planned to make it more fit for purpose while preserving its original historical character. A new lift and stairs will be added to a self-contained portion of the internal structure will be separate from the heritage site so not to build into the 150-year-old building. Internal renovations to the café and visitor centre will include updated signage and a new seating layout, as well as a replacement of windows throughout. Because the existing wastewater treatment system is undersized and no longer fit for purpose, the planning application also requests its replacement. Confirmed by Údarás na Gaeltachta, this planning application is part of the works funded by the €3 million given to build a new visitor centre on Inis Mór called 'Árainn – Place of Stone Visitor Centre'. Plans for the new centre according to Fáilte Ireland and Údarás na Gaeltachta include an immersive visitor attraction celebrating the Irish language and cultural heritage of the Island the Irish Independent reported last year. The funding was intended to provide a café, visitor orientation area, and changing facilities, with the centre's new 'cutting-edge' vision aimed at encouraging longer stays on the island and extending the overall tourist season.

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