Gandon Editions
CHAOS AT THE CROSSROADS (hb)
CHAOS AT THE CROSSROADS (hb)
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by Frank McDonald and James Nix
ISBN 978 0948037 139 (hb) // ISBN 978 0948037 146 (pb)
416pp 24x17cm 244 illus (incl 147 col) index
Chaos at the Crossroads is a catalogue of the sloppy thinking, political chicanery and bureaucratic incompetence that characterised so much of what happened in Ireland during the Celtic Tiger years. It charts how the country was being wrecked by half-baked policies that fail, and are known to fail, whether it was urban-generated housing in rural areas, the relentless sprawl of our cities, the madness of the motorway programme, the scatter-gun approach to decentralisation, or the gross failure to observe our international obligations to combat climate change. Evidence that would underpin sensible decisions was either blithely ignored or never gathered in the first place.
Major controversies of the recent past are covered, right around the Republic, from the proliferation of holiday homes in Donegal to the Shell gas terminal in Mayo, the gross under-use of Shannon Airport, the toxic waste incinerator in Ringaskiddy, the plan to run a road over the Woodstown Viking site in Waterford, the height of the Dublin Port Tunnel, and the M3 motorway running close to Tara. The authors outline how Dublin dominates everywhere else, via the spokes of a motorway network radiating outwards from the M50.
There is an alternative. It’s the idea of closely knit cities, with Galway, Limerick, Cork and Waterford working together with their collective energies counter-balancing the capital. This book also puts forward proposals on how to make urban life work better, how to get around cities and travel between them. It sends a warning of what is likely to happen if the blasé to-hell-with-the-next generation approach is allowed to prevail – chaos.
Chaos at the Crossroads is a passionate examination of the crisis which now faces Dublin, a challenge to those in power, and a superb vehicle for making them accountable.
— Colm Tóibín, Sunday Tribune
McDonald has vociferously highlighted the flaws in Irish policy regarding planning, development and the environment ... he has provided a necessary counterbalance to the development lobby and most importantly has made us think about what we are doing to our environment. Together with James Nix they take the cause to a new level with a 400-page blistering attack on ... the Irish approach to planning and development. The purpose is a call to arms for outraged readers ... Given the importance of good planning for our future wellbeing, this book is required reading for all.
— Peter Clinch, Irish Times
CONTENTS 1 – Introduction 10 References 386 |
published 2005




