
Expo 2025 in Japan a curious beast as Ireland joins nations vying to show off heritage
One Irish official likened it to a crossover between the National Ploughing Championships and the Eurovision, with countries from across the globe represented, but each trying to outdo the other with bespoke pavilions showing off their national culture and heritage.
The event itself takes place once every five years and runs for about six months, with Osaka the most recent city to play host.
The venue is a mammoth one, with a gigantic, 2km-long raised wooden platform encircling each of the individual pavilions.
The raised platform is the largest wooden structure in the world.
When Taoiseach Micheál Martin arrived in the sweltering Osaka heat, he was led underneath the sprawling platform and quickly escorted to the cooler environs of the Ireland pavilion.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin at the Expo 2025 Pavilion in Japan.
Ireland's exhibit includes a cool black room, illuminated only by spotlights, with the sounds of Irish wildlife and a diorama of a bog from back home.
As people move through the exhibit, it transitions into a literary and cultural museum of sorts, with books by famed Irish author Lafcadio Hearn — little known in Ireland but a significant influence on literature in Japan.
A visit to Ireland's pavilion culminates in a 16-minute avant-garde trad performance, with interpretive dance and dread-inducing accordion, before it returns to a more céilí-like sound.
People working at the site itself were at pains to point out how popular the pavilion is among locals in Osaka, recalling that a St Patrick's Day parade had drawn enormous crowds.
Budget of €16.8m
The overall budget allocated to the project is €16.8m, which includes construction of the pavilion but also takes account of staffing costs, fit-out, and programming across the full six-month runtime.
Other pavilions also proved a hit, with the French entry taking guests on a tour throughout the country's fashion industry, with walls lined with Louis Vuitton suitcases.
During his walk around the Expo, the Taoiseach ducked into the European Union's pavilion, where he took some offence to Cork not being included in a photo-booth experience of major European cities.
Turning to his guide when his only Irish option was Dublin, Mr Martin said: 'Ah for God sake, is that all you have? Michael McGrath will have to be contacted."
On his way out, he was ambushed by Europa, the EU's Expo mascot, and nabbed a photo alongside her.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin on a visit to Expo 2025 in Osaka yesterday.
As the evening drew on, guests flocked to the Ireland pavilion for a trad session, with local politicians, diplomats, and other dignitaries eagerly anticipating the evening's main event.
Not a speech by the Taoiseach, but a trailer for a new Japanese morning programme based on the life of the aforementioned Lafcadio Hearne and his wife Yakumo Koizumi.
While the trailer came to a close, the actor portraying Hearne made his appearance and walked up to the stage. Tommy Bastow, known for his appearances in hit series Shogun,will take on the role.
The audience was transfixed, with smartphones rising in the air to catch him making his brief speech, where he touched on his own heritage, citing one of his grandparents having come from Mayo.
As the speeches wound down and music picked up, glasses of Guinness and half-ones of Clonakilty whiskey were poured, before a drone show ended the evening with directions for guests to depart the park.
A curious beast indeed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Extra.ie
21 minutes ago
- Extra.ie
'Guaranteed' new Irish Lotto millionaire on the way after mega EuroMillions win
The National Lottery has promised a new Irish millionaire is on the way this weekend, just weeks after a Cork player bagged an eye-watering €250million prize. Excitement is growing for punters across the country as they rush to tills for a chance to be the next big winner. As Saturday's Lotto jackpot rolls towards an estimated €10million, the National Lottery have said one lucky player is 'guaranteed' to be celebrating. Celebrations at Clifford's Centra on Shandon Street in Cork city centre after they sold the winning ticket for Ireland's biggest ever EuroMillions jackpot. Pic: Mac Innes Photography The Lotto Plus Raffle typically sees between 60 and 120 winners of €500 in every draw, but for this Saturday's draw, Lotto bosses are adding a GUARANTEED to be won €1million to the Lotto Plus Raffle prize fund. Every ticket with the winning Lotto Plus Raffle number drawn in tomorrow's draw will be entered into a once-off draw, where one ticket will be selected to win an additional prize of €1 million, as well as the usual €500 Raffle prize. But that's not all! Players will also have the chance to win the estimated €10million jackpot. It's no €250million, but still a life-changing sum! Pic: Getty Images While there was no Lotto jackpot winner last Saturday, there were more than 101,000 winners across the draws. Amongst the winners across the Lotto and Lotto Plus draws was a player who won the Match5+Bonus prize of €103,318. It comes not long after a Dublin Lotto player missed out on a life-changing €500,000 prize which they won on the March 29 2pm Daily Millions draw. Pic: Derick P. Hudson/Shutterstock. Lotto players have just 90 days to claim prizes they win, with the National Lottery appealing to players who bought tickets at Tesco in Stillorgan to check to see if they had the winning ticket.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Further flights to and from Ireland affected today on foot of French air traffic control strikes
'In addition to flights to/from France being cancelled, this strike will also affect all French overflights,' it said. 'Most disrupted passengers are not even flying to/from France," it added, but over French airspace to destinations like the UK, Greece and Spain. The cancellations include a handful of flights to and from Ireland by Ryanair, Aer Lingus and Air France on Thursday. Cancelled services from Dublin Airport include Nice (FR3954, EI544), Biarritz (FR1982), Paris (AF1617, EI526, FR1860, TO7909) and Murcia (FR5405). Aer Lingus said there would be 'limited flight cancellations to/from Paris and Nice on Thursday, July 3', and that impacted customers had been contacted. "There is potential for similar cancellations on Friday, July 4, should industrial action continue. Any impacted customers will be contacted directly to offer alternative options.' Passengers whose flights have been cancelled should be contacted directly by the airline – though if bookings were made through third parties like travel agents or other airlines, those may receive updates on their behalf. Under EU Regulation 261/2014, affected passengers should be offered the choice between a re-routing or a full refund (read more about your rights if flights are cancelled or delayed). French ATC union, UNSA-ICNA, said the two-day strike was due to persistent understaffing, outdated equipment and a toxic management culture. The industrial action comes as the busy summer holiday period ramps up, though Ryanair has long campaigned for an overhaul of ATC services across Europe. ADVERTISEMENT It says French ATC issues have caused the delay of over 26,000 of its flights in the first six months of 2025, and today called on EU Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, to take urgent action to reform EU ATC services. 'Once again European families are held to ransom by French air traffic controllers going on strike,' said its CEO, Michael O'Leary. "It makes no sense and is abundantly unfair on EU passengers and families going on holidays.' Ryanair maintains a website and 'league table' highlighting what it says are the worst-performing ATCs in the EU. 'France, Spain, Germany, Portugal, and the UK continue to delay thousands of Ryanair flights and millions of Ryanair passengers, putting them in stark contrast to other EU States, like Slovakia, Denmark, Ireland, Belgium and the Netherlands, who are delivering many many more on-time flights,' Mr O'Leary said this week. 'If these five states can properly staff and manage their ATC service, then why can't France, Spain, Germany, Portugal and the UK do likewise?' Ryanair carried 19.9 million passengers in June, up 3pc on the same month last year.


RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Beat the Lotto - a wry look at the joy of six in 1990s Ireland
"Once you heard it, once you saw it, you were in..." One of the best stories from 1990s Ireland (or, indeed, anytime-you-like Ireland) gets a big-screen outing in this charmer of a documentary from director Ross Whitaker (Katie, Between Land and Sea, Unbreakable: The Mark Pollock Story). Back in 1992, a syndicate led by Cork-born accountant Stefan Klincewicz decided "to play every single lottery line" by purchasing "all the combinations of numbers". Even in the good old days of six numbers from 36, that was some logistical and financial ask - and the syndicate needed a rollover Lotto jackpot to clean up on the night. Months of planning came down to desperate hours as the draw neared. Could they do it? Well, even if you know how this caper ultimately played out, director Whitaker makes sure you're still watching his film with a newcomer's sense of anticipation. Beat the Lotto is funny, pacy, and blessed with a better pitch than most Hollywood movies can manage. How has it taken 30-plus years to get this escapade into Irish cinemas? Here, you have a portal to a different Ireland, one where the greeting "Good evening, Ronan" was the clarion call to get Saturday night well and truly under way. So much has changed, but one thing that's still the same is the yearning for "a bit of craic", mischievously hardwired into the Irish DNA and exemplified by the syndicate members who share their memories of taking on the establishment - definitely older, debatably wiser, and still game for a laugh after all these years. The footage of someone rocking up to a newsagent's with a crisps box full of £50s to buy heaps of Lotto tickets is so Guaranteed Irish that you may well feel a lump in your throat. Whitaker hurries the ending, and it's frustrating that there isn't more of an epilogue, because all the interviewees are such good company that you'd love to hear a bit more. That aside, this film, well, makes a balls of it in a lovely way.