Midlands Gateway

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Logo of the Midlands Gateway

Midlands Gateway, also known as Lake-Counties Gateway, is an area centered between the Irish airports of Dublin, Shannon, and Knock. The principal urban centres in the Midlands Gateway include Athlone, Tullamore and Mullingar. The background to the Midlands Gateway project was the Irish government's National Spatial Strategy, launched in 2002. The counties covered in the plan include County Offaly and County Westmeath.

Midlands or Lake-Counties Gateway
Midlands Gateway & Tri-Pole Populations
Midlands Gateway Popular Routes

Objective

The strategy is designed to create an integrated linked Gateway comprising Athlone,[1] Tullamore[2][failed verification] and Mullingar[3][failed verification] together with the other surrounding towns in the region with the objective of developing an "internationally competitive Gateway".[citation needed]

The Irish government[4] strategy, combined with the associated councils has been formulated with the intention of ensuring the availability of choice in residential, retail, leisure and tourist facilities based on the principles of quality of life and environmental enhancement.[citation needed]

Background

The background to the Midlands Gateway project is the Irish government's National Spatial Strategy, which was launched in 2002 with the objective of engendering a "more balanced approach to regional development across the State".[citation needed]

The purpose of this strategic framework is to focus more directly on the role of the Midlands Gateway within this strategy in acting as the economic driving force for the development of the Midlands region.[citation needed]

Goals

In order to ensure that the vision for the Midlands Gateway is achieved, a number of partners were identified as of importance to the Midlands gateway's success. These included a number of Government departments, the Industrial Development Authority (Ireland), National Roads Authority NRA, Higher Education Authority (HEA), Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) and local agencies.[citation needed]

Currently,[when?] the Gateway does not have direct access to complete Inter-Urban Motorways/Dual-Carriageways, both internally and externally. The Gateway, and in particular the three principal Gateway towns of Athlone, Tullamore and Mullingar, is served by main line inter-urban rail and bus networks, with direct access to urban centres of Dublin, Galway and Sligo, and limited local bus services. However, there is poor rail connection within the gateway.[5][failed verification]

In addition, the Gateway is not directly served by an inland port and, of critical importance, is not currently within one hour drive time of an international airport. There is poor road linkage between the Gateways towns, with limited rail and bus service links. If developed as proposed, the road development proposals announced in the Transport 21 Government Proposal (November 2005) would mean that the Midlands Gateway would attain improved access to Galway, Dublin and Sligo, and therefore also to ports and airports.[citation needed] The plan also identified a need to "considerably improve the road infrastructure within and adjacent to the Gateway", as the "existing status is significantly insufficient".[original research?]

Report

A report by Indecon concluded that the "scale of the economic challenges facing the Midlands Gateway is very large". The analysis in the Strategic development Framework for the Midlands Gateway report[6] highlighted the following challenges:

See also

References

  1. ^ Welcome to Athlone Chamber of Commerce
  2. ^ "Tullamore Chamber of Commerce tullamore Offaly Ireland tullamore chamber online offaly birr edenderry ferbane daingean offaly tullamore". Archived from the original on 29 March 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2007.
  3. ^ Home
  4. ^ Speech by Mr. Brian Cowen TD, Minister for Finance at launch of Capital Securities Midlands Gateway Economic Index,2 March 2007 – Department of Finance – Government of Ireland
  5. ^ "Metro Eireann".
  6. ^ Strategic development Framework for the Midlands Gateway report
  7. ^ Irish National Development Plan

External links