Sir, – I was surprised and saddened on Sunday last on my first visit in years to Mullingar railway station. Nothing has been done to conserve the 19th century building. I had sought help a decade and more ago with the support of the journalist Dick Hogan, then editor of the Westmeath Topic.
Nothing has happened. The abandoned building survives like a decayed ghost, the rotting rows of its conjoined vertical pelmets hanging from the roofs, the roof timbers in a much more dilapidated state than when I first admired them.
All this, despite the country being awash with funds for arguably less compelling conservation projects.
The consideration of this significant piece of industrial archaeology is a worthy cause for a politician or the Department of Transport, or the Department of Tourism or even Transport Ireland, or the Heritage Council, especially now that Mullingar is poised to become a major hub in a projected cross-Border railway link.– Yours, etc,
Ann Ingle: Deliberately going out of my way to move for no particular reason has never appealed to me
Gerry Thornley: How about an alternative look at Ireland’s Six Nations win over England?
Is Ireland anti-Semitic, an outlier of tolerance or in the middle ground?
How risky is it to buy a second-hand EV?
PAT WALLACE,
Dublin 4.