Dublin Airport has hidden space for a metro station. Why was it never opened?

Dublin Airport’s ghost metro station and other infrastructure mysteries

Listen | 20:05
DUBLIN AIRPORT, CHECK-IN AREA 14 FIT OUT PJ Hegarty Construction/DAA
DUBLIN AIRPORT, CHECK-IN AREA 14 FIT OUT PJ Hegarty Construction/DAA

When a taxi driver told Irish Times economics correspondent Eoin Burke-Kennedy that there was a ghost train station under Terminal 1 in Dublin Airport he was intrigued.

The architects who designed the terminal in the late 1960s were smart enough to future-proof it – to incorporate into their plan a vast underground train station because, surely it wouldn’t be long before a metro would connect the airport with the city centre.

Their thinking was right – but they didn’t reckon with Ireland’s sluggish planning system and an endemic failure to plan for and then build key infrastructure projects.

This was long before the stop-start Metro North/MetroLink project came along, which is already 20 years in the planning without a track being laid. And even if the metro ever happens, the proposed airport stop is not under Terminal 1.

READ MORE

As Burke-Kennedy tells In the News, Area 14 is a metaphor for so much that is wrong with Ireland’s approach to key infrastructure projects, from housing to energy supply, transport to health.

Planning for a bigger population is something most states, but Ireland particularly, seem to fall down on.

Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Aideen Finnegan.

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison is an Irish Times journalist and cohost of In the News podcast