Opera Site public consultation begins ahead of submission of planning application

  • Opera Site Limerick - v10crop marketing 810x456

The largest inner-city commercial development outside of the capital has been opened up for public submissions from today with the commencement of a non-statutory consultation on the iconic Opera Site development in the heart of Limerick.

In what will be the final step ahead of a planning application being lodged with An Bord Pleanála by year end, Limerick Twenty Thirty, on behalf of Limerick City and County Council, has begun the final round of public consultation.

This includes placing documentation for the planned and fully-funded development on its website, www.limerick2030.ie and the local authority’s websites, www.limerick.ie. Consultation boards have also been put on display at the Dooradoyle and Merchant’s Quay offices of Limerick City and County Council; at Limerick Twenty Thirty, Patrick Street and Limerick City Library, The Granary, Michael Street. In addition, there will be four public information evenings (details below) on consecutive days running from Tuesday 4th December.

The decision to hold the public consultation, despite it not being a statutory requirement is, according to Limerick Twenty Thirty CEO David Conway, in keeping with the intention of Limerick Twenty Thirty, as developer of the project on behalf of Limerick City and County Council, to ensure as much public awareness and outline of the scheme.

The project will be one of the largest urban developments undertaken in Limerick or outside of Dublin, with up to 3,000 expected to be employed at the site when fully completed following a six-year development programme.

Said the Limerick Twenty Thirty CEO David Conway, “We are at a really exciting stage now for the project. Limerick City and County Council have secured loan funding of €170 million from the European Investment Bank and the Council of Europe Development Bank and we are on the verge of submitting a planning application for the project to An Bord Pleanála. So after some disappointments in the past when the site was in private ownership, we are now finally about to see one of the most eagerly awaited developments in the state come to fruition.”

“Before we submit the planning application, however, we want to give the public one last opportunity to make submissions. This will in fact, be the second publication consultation on the project. The first, in February following the publication of the design brief, generated a hugely positive response and showed the public interest and support there is for the project.”

He continued, “The Opera Site will be the one of the biggest projects of its kind developed outside of the capital and that, in its own right, reflects the confidence and ambition there is in Limerick today. We are in a much different place and turning heads not just nationally but internationally. That’s going to happen even more now because of Opera. These are exciting times for Limerick."

Information Meeting Details:

  • Limerick Twenty Thirty office, Patrick Street, Limerick on Tuesday 4 December 2018 between 5pm and 7pm
  • Limerick City and County Council office, Merchant Quay on Wednesday 5 December 2018 between 5pm and 7pm
  • Limerick City Library, The Granary, Michael Street, Limerick on Thursday 6 December 2018 between 5pm and 7pm
  • Limerick City and County Council office, Dooradoyle, Limerick on Friday 7 December 2018 between 5pm and 7pm
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Treaty Stone Limerick. Photo Piotr Machowczyk