Talk:Roads in Ireland
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[edit] Not a joke
This could be told as an Irish joke but it is true.
- Dual carriageways are still rather new in Ireland so as a precaution, on the rear of each sign on a dual carriageway is another sign saying Wrong way. Turn back.
They may not be everywhere but I saw some recently on the N11 road. -- RHaworth 10:09, 2005 Apr 3 (UTC)
They are usually at the end of motorway off-ramps... --Rdd 4 July 2005 23:38 (UTC)
They most certainly exist on onramps, but not on the back of every sign, even on the very very old dual carraigeways (nass, stillorgan) --Kiand 17:16, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
These are still placed on new motorways/dual-carriageways. There are also confirmation destination signs just where off-ramps leave the carriageway - they are of little use as it's not like you can change your mind at the point where you can read them. The morale of the story - don't assume signposting in Ireland is useful or well-thought out. zoney ♣ talk 00:02, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Connections between the systems
It seems to treat them as independent entities and doesn't cover interconnections particularly well. Looking at map I see the M1 stops near Dundalk, but the route continues north through the international border, round Newry, and then meeting up the the other M1 near Lisburn. Morwen - Talk 16:18, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
- Both the list of route designations in the Republic and Northern Ireland note the end-destinations, and also note the connecting route designations across the border (e.g. N1 Dublin - Dundalk - (A1 to Belfast) and A1 Belfast - Lisburn - Banbridge - Newry - becoming the N1 at the border and continuing to Dundalk and Dublin).
- I'm uncertain as to what further could be done - there are two route classification schemes in use, despite the major cross-border routes, and certain routes in the Republic being mapped as if sections run through the North (e.g. N3 "reappearing" in Donegal).
- The current arrangement is useful as it clearly shows the sections pertaining to particular designations, but they are all here on one page so interconnections can clearly be followed. Admittedly a map would be the most useful tool in indicating contiguous routes (i.e. Dublin-Belfast, etc.) that consist of several designated roads.
[edit] J routes in Dublin city
There are a number of roads in Dublin city classified as Jxx roads. I can't find out wht the J stands for. Does anyone know?
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- This is a crazed local scheme in Dublin. Two "ring" routes are designated (going via various roads). These are coloured in two colours (I think one is light-blue). Then on the radial routes passing through them, there are signs marking a junction number on the ring route. The "J" stands for junction.
- I really think it's very unlikely anyone makes use of the scheme. It's another obvious indicator of our useless and confusing route signage in this country, which doesn't adhere to standards (not that there seem to be consistent ones anyways!)
- zoney ♣ talk 11:02, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] National Primary Routes and Motorways
Is there a better way to explain how route numbers work in this country. People keep making the same mistake thinking that N routes and M routes are separate (like A roads and M roads in the UK). They aren't. All M roads in Ireland are part of a national primary route (e.g. N1, N7). The roads which were previously N roads before being bypassed by motorway are no longer N roads. In many cases, signage does not always reflect this change (although a dead giveaway is usually the brand new signs erected at the beginning/end of the bypass which list an R road designation on the directions for the bypassed route).
Also, in urban areas, the signposted N routes do not always adhere to the legislated routes. A case in point is the N7 in Limerick. The new southern bypass has been signposted as the N7, and the road into Limerick through Castletroy is signposted as an R route on the new signage (at the beginning of bypass, and the junction with the road to Murroe). However, the existing N7 signage is still in place along that road into the city (the Dublin road), including recent signage on the N7 Parkway scheme (completed prior to the southern bypass).
The legislated route (not updated to show the southern bypass now being the N7) continues into the city, across to King's Island, and along the Northern Relief Road.
Have a look at some maps, the situation on the ground, and the statute book to see the mess for this route! Note that on the N7, only the Naas Motorway is included in this 1994 act (motorway sections are highlighted in Block capitals.
In short, the system itself is confusing, and the lax implementation on the ground all the more so. Have I described it under the Route Number Inheritance section as best as possible?
I wonder can we write to the minister responsible, looking for definitive routes to be set in the statute books again, and regularly updated as needed?
zoney ♣ talk 14:44, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
- Updated routes in the statute books.
- N7 road and R445 road updated appropriately (situation described in parent comment is resolved).
- Hopefully updates will occur more frequently as routes change. Most recently completed project as of July 2006 is the Mitchelstown relief road. The first source above already describes that as part of the N8.
- zoney ♣ talk 22:08, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Local Council Roads
It say in the "Roads in the Republic of Ireland" section about a type of road which is a layer of stones set in 6mm of bitumen. I believe this is called "chip seal" and is used in some places in New Zealand. Can anyone add corrections/other info?
[edit] Style/POV problems =
This article contains much valuable information but it has serious problems of style and POV. It needs to be Wikified.
Right in the first para we have:
"It is true to say that many rural roads, even in Northern Ireland, remain an 'exciting' ride. For an unforgettable example, drive from Charleville to Macroom in County Cork; all the stereotypical components are present, from road 'surface' and potholes, to junctions and vicious bends (often combined for added thrills)."
And there's a para ending: "Among the Irish motoring public, surface dressing is becoming taboo and someday the councils will realise this" (blatant POV). Ryancolm 10:07, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Standardisation Help!
I am trying to come up with a fact-box for National secondary roads; below is my first attempt in the N80 article:
Destinations (NW to SE) | |
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One problem; it could do with the route-marker logo which appears in all the Motorway and Primary route articles (usually supplied by User:Zoney as far as I can tell).
The box (right) here is obviously copied and modified from the Primary N-series articles; adjusted for the fact that very few towns are bypassed and the roads don't have interchanges.
Would any genius out there like to try and come up with a more refined info-box so we can apply it to my planned series on Nat secondary roads?
I think such a series is a good way of cataloguing the geography of Ireland as they pass through all the main towns, hills, lakes, historic sites etc - they can be built into the link to all of these. Some graphic which maps the road with the various connections (towns, villages, junctions, sites, hills, points of interest, rivers and so forth) in some stylised manner would be great.
And for roads train-spotters we could give the carriageway standard of the various sections; these roads will be evolving for the next 20 years or more. (Sarah777 22:47, 21 February 2007 (UTC))
[edit] Zoney Template
R154 Destinations (SE to NW) |
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This is better, it includes road connections/junctions. Still need route-marker logo to give it a nice presentation. HOW are these generated? (Sarah777 23:21, 26 February 2007 (UTC))
[edit] Dvision into two articles
Why is there only one article for the roads of Ireland? Whilst the railway network on the island of Ireland is two systems which are very much interlinked: joint serivce (enterprise), same gauge, same loco models, same signalling systems etcl, the road networks are not. Across the border there are roads that link and both drive on the same side of the road but that is about where the similarities end. Whilst there are some difference between NI and GB in relation to roads, for example the numbering system, number plate format and licencing body (the DVLA doesn't cover NI) the actual rules of the road are UK-wide.
For example aspects that are the same as the rest of the UK but different to the Republic include:
- Speed limits in mph
- Road sign designs
- Road markings
- Driving test requirements
- Traffic Laws
- Road standards & design
- Road classifications (m-way, A roads, b roads etc)
The government body responsible for roads in NI, the Roads Service, is not a UK-wide authority but since devolution to Scotland and Wales there responsibility for roads is done on a Constituent country basis anyhow.
This is not being proposed from a political position but from a perspective to build a more logical setup here on Wiki. There are as many differences between the roads of NI and the Republic as there are between any two continential European countries but there we seperate articles for each country. At the moment the Roads in the United Kingdom, IMHO stupidly, directs to Great Britain road numbering scheme which is a problems that needs solving ASAP and as part of that there should be inclusion of NI as it is very much part of the UK when it comes to roads and driving. Therefore I propose that this article should be changed to Roads of the Republic of Ireland, which is pretty much what it already is, and information about Northern Ireland merged into a new UK-wide article. --Achmelvic 11:17, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
- Unless you are going to have a Roads in Northern Ireland article, there is very little point in starting a Roads in the Republic of Ireland article. The country's name is Ireland, but for a variety of reasons (some very contentious) it is currently residing at Republic of Ireland. So given that you end up with a situation where perhaps you don't have information about ALL the roads in Ireland on the page titled Roads in Ireland, which many users (not editors) would find confusing. After all, the users are the most important consideration. One solution might be to radically expand the roads information on the UK page and to place a {{main}} template on this page pointing to it. But given that it is currently a redirect, my guess is that a conscious decision has been taken to separate geographically. Have a delve in the archives, and see if there is anything there. Frelke 12:24, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
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- Why would there need to be a Roads in Northern Ireland article? Northern Ireland is part of the UK and the similarities when it comes to roads, which I listed above, mean a UK-wide article with sections about the four member countries would be the most logical. After all there aren't seperate Roads in England, Roads in Scotland, Roads in Wales exactly because the similarities are much more numerous than the differences and these difference could be mentioned in a Roads in the United Kingdom article.
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- My point is that that the information about roads in Northern Ireland should be included with other UK-wide information, not with information about roads in the Republic of Ireland. I think you're getting mixed up about the difference between Ireland (the island which includes two independently government states) and Ireland (the country which is called the Republic of Ireland in all other aspects here on wiki to stop confusion with the afore mentioned). For pre-1922 historical and non-political topics Ireland (the island) is the accepted form, but for current political-based topics Ireland (the country, ie Republic of Ireland) is used.
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- As roads and their rules, standards, responsibility for them etc are determined by governments the information here should be in two articles as there are two seperate nations involved:
- Roads in the United Kingdom (including England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland and which Roads in Northern Ireland should redirect to.
- Roads in the Republic of Ireland which would be this article without the information about NI.
- This article as titled Roads in Ireland could then be changed to a simple explaination page of there being two networks and having links to the national articles.
- As roads and their rules, standards, responsibility for them etc are determined by governments the information here should be in two articles as there are two seperate nations involved:
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- Other political country based topics have articles named as such, for example Taxation in the Republic of Ireland with Northern Ireland covered by the accompanying article Taxation in the United Kingdom, and its a similar arrangement with the road networks and rules, characteristics etc. --Achmelvic 13:14, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
- We don't have a Roads in the Republic of France or a Roads in the Federal Republic of Germany articles. So why have a Roads in the Republic of Ireland article. If you go over to the talk page you can join the naming discussions over there. I'm sure they would appreciate another expert view. The bottom line is that if there was an article on the subject of roads in the southern part of Ireland, the correct name would be Roads in Ireland. Now if you want to list the NI roads information on a UK page then feel free to do so. But this article will remain where it is. Frelke 13:52, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
- Other political country based topics have articles named as such, for example Taxation in the Republic of Ireland with Northern Ireland covered by the accompanying article Taxation in the United Kingdom, and its a similar arrangement with the road networks and rules, characteristics etc. --Achmelvic 13:14, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
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- OK as a compromise how about having the setup I proposed above:
- Roads in the United Kingdom (including England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland and which Roads in Northern Ireland should redirect to.
- Roads in Ireland which would be this article without the information about NI.
- BUT with a disambig added that for Northern Ireland visit Roads in the United Kingdom and that this article is only about roads in the country/state/jurisdiction south of the border?
- Then if a wider consencious is reached about the naming on Wiki of what is now Republic of Ireland it can be dealt with according at some point in the future?
- Of course it then needs a Roads in the United Kingdom article writing! :-) --Achmelvic 14:47, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
- But that compromises those users who come to a page called Roads in Ireland expecting to find information about ALL the roads in Ireland. The usual wiki way is to use a {{main}} pointing to where most of the data is held whilst keeping the very basics on a page such as this. And don't forget to check all the links. There are 250 links into this article which will need to checked and fixed if they are wrong. But first you need to rename/move the GB article to UK and add in the NI section. There may well be objections over there.
- OK as a compromise how about having the setup I proposed above:
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And rest assured, there will be objections here too. (Sarah777 21:37, 21 March 2007 (UTC))
- But my point is that unlike many other Irish topics such as Culture, Sport etc which are justifiably covered by ban-Irish articles roads are the products the political system which govern them and like it or not there are two political systems in Ireland which their own completely seperate and independent networks with different:
- Numbering system
- Road rules
- Signs
- Markings
- Classifications
- Taffic Laws
- Speed limits
- Measurement systems (km vs miles etc)
- Licencing systems
- Tax regimes
- Development histories
- Future plans
- Responsible bodies & gov depts
- The road network of Ireland (the island) is not one network and with the one exception of the current A1-M1 crossborder project (which is the first time in history that the two governing bodies have co-operated) there is no more interaction between the two systems any more than there is between any other two European systems. --Achmelvic 09:52, 22 March 2007 (UTC)