Results 1-20 of 39 for "moore street" speaker:Enda Kenny
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- Order of Business (16 Jul 2013)
Enda Kenny: -----a very extensive development. The Minister is concerned that buildings to the rear of Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street, which were in existence either in 1916 or beforehand, should not be demolished. He is also concerned with regard to the proposal to put an underground car park in place beneath Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street. For that reason, he recommended to the Cabinet that approval be...
- Leaders' Questions (24 Jun 2014)
Enda Kenny: ...one sector and another. Work in the other areas mentioned is under way and will I hope be fully completed before 2016. When one exits the side door of the GPO, one can turn left, heading towards Moore Street. However, the gun in place at the Rotunda hospital meant that people leaving the GPO could not move towards Moore Street and The O'Rahilly was shot further up as he moved through...
- Commemorative Events (11 Oct 2011)
Enda Kenny: We have discussed this previously here as the Deputy is aware. He knows the story in respect of my views about No. 16 Moore Street and the general locality. Without interfering with the legalities of what obtains at present I see real opportunities in this area. Deputy Adams is aware that in September 2006 No. 16 Moore Street was added to the register of protected structures under the...
- Leaders' Questions (5 Mar 2013)
Enda Kenny: ...features in our capital city need to be attended to, including the military archives in Cathal Brugha Barracks, the courthouse in Kilmainham Gaol, the GPO itself and, as the Deputy mentioned, 14-17 Moore Street, which I have referred to as the lanes of history, right up as far as the Rotunda, or the site of the actual surrender on the pavement a short distance away from that. The plans...
- Order of Business (8 May 2013)
Enda Kenny: ...It is clearly an important link from a commercial, social and tourism perspective. The Minister, Sammy Wilson is dealing with the evaluation process, which I hope can be concluded successfully. Moore Street is a monument of which one is not proud. I visited it and it is not the kind of site to which one would like to refer people as the last headquarters of those who left the GPO by...
- Leaders' Questions (16 May 2012)
Enda Kenny: Gabh mo leithscéal, a Theachta. I brought people to look at Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street. It is not an edifying site and not the kind of place one would like to send people to have a look. Given modern technology and the availability of computer applications - apps - when one walks out the side door of the GPO and turns left - as all those who were evacuating the building did and broke in...
- Leaders' Questions (9 May 2017)
Enda Kenny: .... Obviously there are a number of different parties here; the State, the city council and private property owners. The Government made a decision by the end of 2015 to purchase Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street and to keep the site permanently in the State's hands for people to understand the historic importance of the buildings and their part in Irish history. This was an important decision,...
- Written Answers — Architectural Heritage: Architectural Heritage (29 Nov 2005)
Enda Kenny: Question 111: To ask the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government if aid will be granted for the preservation of 16 Moore Street, Dublin which was the last headquarters of the 1916 Rising leaders; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [36632/05]
- Leaders' Questions (16 May 2012)
Enda Kenny: ...sé thar a bheith oiriúnach. Is maith an rud go mbÃonn an cuimhneachán ann mar atá. Tá sé tábhachtach do stair na tÃre agus don aos óg go gcuimhneoimÃs ar a thárla i 1916. Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street are designated under law as a national monument. Approval for development in the vicinity of any national monument must have the approval of the Minister for Arts, Heritage and...
- Order of Business (13 Jan 2016)
Enda Kenny: As an oftentimes forceful representative for her community, I am quite sure Deputy McDonald would agree that it is a right and proper thing for this State to have acquired Nos. 15, 16 and 17 Moore Street and to address the proper restoration of the historic buildings concerned with public moneys in the interests of preserving them in the best way possible for the generations after us.
- Commemorative Events (11 Oct 2011)
Enda Kenny: ...Deenihan, outlined the broad range with which the consultation group intends to involve itself. It is open to the group to interact with Dublin City Council, whether it be about Boland's Mill, Moore Street or other relevant locations in the general city centre area, to determine what should be included. This is part of what can be done.
- Commemorative Events (11 Oct 2011)
Enda Kenny: ...to the stipulation that no works could commence until ministerial consent had been obtained under the National Monuments Act for any works that might impact on the monument site at numbers 14 to 17 Moore Street. The buildings require ongoing maintenance works to ensure their structural protection pending a full programme of refurbishment works. In 2006, and prior to the preservation...
- Commemorative Events (7 Jun 2011)
Enda Kenny: ...proposals for major historic presentations at the GPO site itself and that is a major plan. Those who exited the GPO in that time of insurrection had to break in through the walls of the houses on Moore Street to make their way to No. 16, from which they all exited. Some of the original brickwork is there, as well as some of the cobblestones and some of the archways into the backs of the...
- Order of Business (16 Jul 2013)
Enda Kenny: ...for Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht brought a memo to Government this morning and a decision was made in respect of it. As the Deputy is aware, the national monument comprises Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street. No. 16 is the location at which the final council of war took place and is owned by a company which is in possession of planning permission from Dublin City Council for-----
- Order of Business (31 Mar 2015)
Enda Kenny: ...give the Deputy an accurate date for it but it is his intention to deal with it. The national monuments Bill is for publication later this year. With regard to the question on Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street, it is a national monument. Attempts have been made to deal with the issue over the past dozen years, but it is not all within the remit of Government as the Deputy is aware, as it...
- Order of Business (8 Jun 2016)
Enda Kenny: ...gone on since 1948 or shortly thereafter. The boundaries have changed and are being changed on a fairly regular basis. I will ask the Minister to brief Deputy Adams. The Deputy mentioned the Moore Street monument. The judge has given his verdict in this case, and it is a long judgment. The Minister has not decided to appeal the case, but it might be necessary to seek clarification...
- Commemorative Events (7 Jun 2011)
Enda Kenny: ...report progress on how the archival analysis is progressing in order that it will be available. We plan to have those 300,000 files available to the public long before 2016. I have visited No. 16 Moore Street and understand there is a planning process under way which I do not want to prejudice in any way. In 2007 the then Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government, Dick...
- Order of Business (28 May 2013)
Enda Kenny: ...the Bill is not expected until the middle of next year but the Minister for Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht will bring a memo to Government in respect of his decision in so far as the national monument on Moore Street is concerned long before the Bill is published. In so far as the amalgamation of the roles to which Deputy Ó Fearghaíl referred, the official languages...
- Leaders' Questions (26 Jan 2016)
Enda Kenny: ...different variations, given the fact that Dublin City Council, as the planning authority, has responsibility regarding applications that come before it for planning permission both in respect of Moore Street and the lanes of history at the back of O'Connell Street and so on. In respect of the centenary commemorations for 2016, the Government decided to purchase this for a sum of...
- Order of Business (6 Dec 2016)
Enda Kenny: ...mezzanine interpretive centre in the GPO, another €5 million for Kilmainham courthouse and another €5 million for the development of the military archives. We have had purchase of Nos. 14 to 17 Moore Street and many other issues in respect of 1916. This is an important letter, but the estimated cost is very high. All the issues surrounding the 1916 centenary...