Irish Daily Mail

By Ken Foxe €150m Adare bypass fast-tracked for the Ryder Cup will not be finished in time

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A €150MILLION bypass project fast-tracked so it would be ready for the Ryder Cup in Adare may not be finished in time for the golf tournament.

The Department of Transport was warned in internal documents that time was running out for the 7km road to be finished by the time the internatio­nal golf event is held in September 2027.

A letter from Transport Infrastruc­ture Ireland (TII) said there was no way the entire bypass could be finished in time for the Ryder Cup.

However, TII chief Peter Walsh said there was a narrow window to partly complete the road to help divert traffic from the heritage town of Adare in Co. Limerick.

His letter said: ‘This is an ambitious target given the time remaining and the work required, however not impossible if early approval to proceed is given, funding provided and resources provided.’

Mr Walsh said all State agencies working together would be ‘essential’ if there was to be any hope of getting the partial bypass built before 2027.

He also warned that risks could ‘materialis­e’ during the planning and constructi­on phase that would ‘undermine’ delivery of the scheme before the Ryder Cup started.

Mr Walsh said the alternativ­e was to put in place an enormous traffic management plan to deal with an extra 17,000 cars passing through the town on each day of the tournament.

A Department of Transport submission for Minister Eamon Ryan explained the importance of the bypass scheme and how Adare was dogged by poor air quality, long journey times, and damage to its tourism prospects.

It said having the full road in place prior to the Ryder Cup was unrealisti­c but that a partial scheme could be built in time if it was approved.

The submission said: ‘Transport Infrastruc­ture Ireland believe that while ambitious, it is possible to deliver this if early approval to proceed is given, and funding and resources are provided.’

Mr Ryan was also told that if this first part of the project went ahead, the rest of it would also ultimately need to be built to ‘align with the planning approvals [already] in place’.

The submission said more than a dozen State agencies would need to work in concert to deliver on the plan, including four Government department­s, the local authority, the Office of Public Works (OPW), and several other public bodies.

On funding the scheme, which has since been given an allocation of €150million, officials said it would be difficult to give an accurate estimate.

Parts of the submission covering costs were redacted under Freedom Of Informatio­n but it did say that land acquisitio­n would be required and that there were significan­t constraint­s on the budget for new roads in 2024 and 2025.

It said if approved, both the Department of Transport and TII would closely monitor the project to try to ensure it was ready before the Ryder Cup. Asked about the records, the Department of Transport said the road project would help remove traffic from Adare village and alleviate a serious bottleneck on the national road network.

It said: ‘In addition, this decision creates the possibilit­y of delivering the bypass ahead of the Ryder Cup, which will be held at Adare Manor in September 2027.

‘If delivered before the Ryder Cup, the bypass could assist traffic management during this busy period.

‘It is important to point out that there are risks which may materialis­e during constructi­on which could slow delivery.’

‘Could help traffic management’

 ?? ?? Tournament: Tiger Woods playing at the JP McManus Pro-Am in 2010 at the Adare Manor golf resort, above
Tournament: Tiger Woods playing at the JP McManus Pro-Am in 2010 at the Adare Manor golf resort, above
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