
Dart extension to Wicklow town pushed back to 2030
The National Transport Authority included the extension as part of their Greater Dublin Area Transport Strategy 2022-2042 that was adopted in 2023.
An extension of the line to Wicklow town is currently under active review with battery-electric carriages, which are undergoing testing and expected to be used when the service begins operations.
The line extension has been hit with many false starts in recent years.
In 2019, it was announced that the Dart for Wicklow town would begin serving passengers by 2023-2024.
Timeframes for 2025 and 2026 were also promised but were subsequently missed.
In February 2025, representatives from Irish Rail met with members from the Transport, Infrastructure Delivery and Emergency Services, Strategic Policy Committee of Wicklow County Council where they were told that an hourly service would be introduced by the end of 2028.
This follows a presentation from then NTA CEO Anne Graham and now interim chief Hugh Creegan to Wicklow County Council's monthly meeting in October of last year, confirming that the NTA are looking at a four-to-five-year timeframe to introduce the service.
Now in a parliamentary update to Wicklow TDs John Brady and Jennifer Whitmore Transport Minister Darragh O'Brien confirmed that it won't be until the end of this decade when trains will begin carrying passengers on a more frequent basis.
'The new battery-electric Dart carriages will first be deployed from Dublin to Drogheda from next year. As more carriages arrive, it may be feasible to also deploy them to extend Dart services to and from Wicklow, subject to funding and approvals for the required charging infrastructure. The NTA is currently examining this issue with a view to progressing the extension around 2029.' he added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
2 days ago
- Irish Independent
Go-Ahead criticised for ghost bus services in north Wicklow
Earlier this year as part of the latest phase of the Bus Connects network redesign, several new routes were introduced that serve residents in Newtownmountkennedy, Delgany, Bray, Greystones and Enniskerry. Speaking in the Dail, Deputy Whitmore said there are still problems on many routes including the L2, L1, L3 and L15. 'A bus needs to show up every single time or else people will not use buses and will not be able to trust the service. Unfortunately, that is what is happening in Wicklow, with buses not showing up, buses being late and elderly people having to wait for two hours for an hourly bus that just did not appear.' Following a competitive tender process, the National Transport Authority awarded Go-Ahead a contract to bus services in parts of Wicklow in October 2018 which ran for five years up to 2023, with the company choosing to extend it by two years up to 2025. With the contract now due to expire at the end of the year, Deputy Whitmore asked the Transport Minister Darragh O' Brien whether it should be renewed. Minister O'Brien said the company have made efforts to combat the rise in so called ghost busses across their network. 'Since January, eight new engineering staff have joined the company, and 129 drivers have started in the driving school. In addition, Go-Ahead Ireland has completed overseas recruitment, with ten engineers expected to start in September.' According to Minister O'Brien there are two main reasons for buses not showing up. 'One, late notification by operators of cancelled and curtailed services, with that resulting in incorrect information being given to customers, and two, technical issues with the older bus automatic vehicle location equipment.' 'That equipment is being replaced with live data on each bus. This will improve the service greatly from 2026.' he added. Deputy Whitmore acknowledged that improvements have been made, but believes the routes in Wicklow have been the worst hit since they were introduced in January. 'If we could see exactly how problematic this is, the difficulties it is causing and on what routes it is causing them, in a more real-time fashion, that would be very useful.' she added. Figures from the National Transport Authority show operators were fined just short of €1.5 million in 2024 for not meeting their service level agreements. Funded by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme


The Irish Sun
3 days ago
- The Irish Sun
‘Public spoke & we listened' – Irish Rail confirm new station plans for busy Dublin suburb in huge boost for commuters
COMMUTERS are set for a major boost as Irish Rail has introduced plans for a new train station in the Cabra area of Dublin. Irish Rail recently announced that the new station would be located in the centre of Cabra, on the existing Phoenix Park Tunnel line, providing connections within the capital. Advertisement 2 Irish Rail has proposed a new station for Cabra Credit: Irish Rail/Future Realities Studios 2 It is set to provide rail access for up to 26k people living within one km of the station Credit: Irish Rail/Future Realities Studios The new station is set to provide rail access for up to 26,000 people living within one km of the station. It comes after a large number of locals asked for a new station at After the study, If the plan is approved, the construction of the new station at Cabra will be delivered together with the Dart+ programme works. Advertisement READ MORE ON IRISH RAIL It is funded by the As part of the Dart+ South West project, a new station at Heuston West is also proposed to be built, connecting commuters to the south and west of the country, including Currently, this line serves the services between Newbridge, Hazelhatch and Celbridge, and Dublin Connolly and Grand Canal Dock. The Cabra station can also offer interchange opportunities for Advertisement MOST READ ON THE IRISH SUN Warning And it will be an approximately 20-minute walk from the new station to the TUD campus at Grandegorman, providing students with an extra mode of public transport. 'The pandemic is over' cry fuming Irish Rail passengers as they demand return of popular service The plans and documents of the new station will be on display at the Deaf Village Ireland Campus from today until July 2, with the information also available to view on the Irish Rail website. Speaking at the campaign's launch for the new station, the Irish Rail Chief Executive Jim Meade said: "The provision of this new station at Cabra demonstrates the power of public consultation. "The public spoke and we listened. This station will provide excellent connectivity for the residents of Cabra. Advertisement "The railway line has always been part of Cabra, but yet the community has not been rail connected. "This is about to change and change for the better." 'GREAT BENEFIT TO CABRA' Darragh O'Brien, Minister for Transport, said: "I am delighted to support the launch of this public information today for the development of a new rail station in Cabra. "The station will be of great benefit to Cabra and I'm very happy to see it move forward with public input." Advertisement NTA's head of rail investment Marcello Corsi said: "The NTA very much welcomes this progress on the project and we would encourage people to use this opportunity to find out about the benefits it will deliver for their community. "The development of railway station at Cabra was a key component for this area in NTA's Greater Dublin Area Transport Strategy, and is part of an overall plan to make an improved rail network available to a greater number of people across the region.'


Irish Times
5 days ago
- Irish Times
The Irish Times view on College Green redevelopment: the price is rising
It is hard to get past the magnitude of the new €80 million budget for the College Green Plaza. As with almost every other public infrastructure project undertaken in the State, if it had gone ahead when originally planned, it would have cost a fraction of the price. When Dublin City Council submitted an application for the traffic-free civic space to An Bord Pleanála in 2017 it expected it to cost €10 million. The board in 2018 rejected the council's plans, citing the potential 'significantly negative impacts' on bus services. The National Transport Authority (NTA) in September 2020 published its final plans for a redesigned bus network for the city. Under BusConnects, services would be routed away from College Green and east Dame Street. Two months later the council published new plans to double the size of the traffic free plaza. Eliminating the conflict with bus services meant traffic could be banned from the area west of the Luas lines in front of Trinity College, as far as the junction with Dame Street and South Great George's Street. READ MORE It took another two years for the council to announce that it was required under procurement rules to seek a new design team for the project due to increases in the scope of the scheme. The council now says it hopes to have preliminary designs, based on the 2020 enlarged plaza area, prepared by the end of this summer. The council and the NTA expect the bus services will finally have been rerouted from the area by the end of next year. Work, the council hopes, will start on site by the end of the following year, and will be completed by the end of the decade, all within a much pricier new budget of €80 million. That budget does include a surprisingly large 40 per cent contingency, but even if the council didn't eat into that contingency sum at all, the cost of the scheme would still be close to touching €50 million. Given the transformative effect this project could have, finally creating a civic space in the heart of Dublin city, perhaps that budget is justifiable, and in building such a large contingency into the budget, maybe the council is just being responsible and realistic. It is, after all, a larger area than planned eight years ago. All the same, the most significant benefits of the project would be realised anyway, even if the council was to spend little additional cash. Cars have already been banned from College Green, with buses to go by the end of next year. The area will, without the need for any other intervention, by default become the domain of pedestrians and cyclists. Some new paving and greenery, seating and toilets, would certainly improve it, but the heavy lifting of relocating the space from vehicles to people will have been achieved with minimal outlay. The detailed plans need to make a strong case if there is to be a further major expenditure.