Galway Light Rail | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Locale | Galway City |
Transit type | Tram (orLight rail) |
Number of lines | None (1 proposed) |
Since the early 2000s, a number of proposals have been made by politicians and interest groups inGalway to introduce alight rail system in the city. No light rail proposal for the city has received any government support to date.[1]
TheCorrib Light Rail was the name given to a light rail proposal made in 2006.[2][3][4]
Gluas (the Irish word for "movement", and a pun on "Galway" + "Luas") was a proposed tram or light rail system forGalway city, similar to theLuas found in Dublin.[1] It had been proposed by a Galway-based lobby group.[1] There are three proposed routes for the Gluas:[5]
A fourth line was proposed for the future, when the Gluas had been established:
The original proposal of three lines would require the construction of 64 stations, with park and ride facilities at Knocknacarra and Dangan.[7]
At the time the project was proposed in June 2008, it was suggested that it would be completed within three years. In 2015, backers of the project once again appealed to the city council to consider funding the project.[8] Calls were renewed in 2017 at local and national levels.[9][1]
Sólás Uirbeach Iarnrod na Gaillimhe (or SUIG, meaning 'comfort urban rail of Galway') was a third and separate proposal made in 2014.[10]
In April 2021, the Gluas Group held a webinar in which Minister for TransportEamon Ryan announced a feasibility study on Light Rail for 2022.[11]
In October 2024, a feasibility study commissioned by the National Transport Authority found that there was a case for constructing a fifteen-kilometre light rail line fromRoscam to Knocknacarra viaEyre Square andUniversity Hospital Galway. It set out options including conventional Light Railway Transit and Very Light Rail.[12][13]
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