Archive for August, 2007

John McCarthy speaks about the sale of the Green

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

From the Irish Examiner is an article about an interview with John McCarthy, the son of the late Denis McCarthy who is selling 1 Park Villas and the Green.

If someone wants to develop the green, then it’s up to them, whoever the new owner will be. It will then be up to Cork City Council to decide what happens.

The residents of Bishopscourt would argue that Mr. McCarthy’s father never intended the Green to be sold by tender, with a view to being developed by a potential purchaser. Mr. McCarthy Senior included the Green in the original drawings as an amenity for Bishopscourt, as well as then taking the trouble to plant many trees and lay paths through the Green.

Echo Article

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

There was more coverage of Sunday’s Green Day picnic and entertainment in the Evening Echo.

Examiner Article

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

The Irish Examiner featured a story yesterday about the campaign to have the Green rezoned.

Green Aid Day

Monday, August 27th, 2007
banner

The Green Day celebrations took place yesterday. The day also marked the unveiling of the “Keep Bishopscourt Green” sign on the advertising hoarding that is on the gable end of the small house that is for sale.

Throughout the afternoon, public displays of support were audible from all the car horns that were beeped as people drove past the Green.

The day was a great success, great fun was had by all. The children in particular enjoyed the bouncy castle and of course the entertainment provided by the band created a great atmosphere.

band

Everyone shared their stories of the Green and enjoyed the reunion of neighbours. The weather smiled down on us all, with blue skies and sunshine.

greenview

View more photographs of the day.

Please email your photos to admin at keepbishopscourtgreen dot org to have them included on the website!

Site update

Friday, August 24th, 2007

It is just over three weeks since the “Keep Bishopscourt Green” website went live. So far we have had over two hundred signatures on the petition. We hope that people will spread the word and encourage all those they know who live in Bishopstown to sign the petition.

The preparations for the open day are in full swing and we look forward to seeing everyone on the Green at 1500hrs this coming Sunday. It promises to be a great day!

bishopscourt green

Green Day

Thursday, August 16th, 2007

An event called “THE GREEN DAY” will be held on Sunday, 26th August, on the Green.

We hope to see all Lower Bishopscourt Residents, their children and grandchildren and all their friends on the day. Our friends from Upper Bishopscourt are also invited as they have a smaller Green which could presumably also come under attack for sale by tender for development purposes.

We request that people gather on the green at 3 p.m. to eat and drink and share their reminiscences of the Green. Those who grew up in Bishopscourt may organise some games of rounders, red rover and hunt which were the main stay games of choice for the Green when they were children.

While some refreshments will be organised we hope all will “bring their own bread and butter and a bun”.

This event, if well attended, will convey to the purchaser of the house and the City Councillors our determination to keep the Green as it has always been since the inception of the estate.

(It is expected that the sale of the house will be decided shortly after 14,August 2007).

To really show your support for the Green, come wearing a t-shirt or baseball cap or button badge from our shop.

TG4 Nuacht

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

news

The Keep Bishopscourt Green Campaign has been covered on TG4 Nuacht.

To view the news piece, go to this link.

Then view the news for August 14th 2007. The piece appears about 10 minutes into the broadcast. The news may also be accessed via the “Cursai Reatha - Cartlann” link at the side of the page.

Rezoning Motions

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

As part of the campaign to have the Green rezoned, the Lower Bishopscourt Resident’s Association held a meeting when it was learned that the Green was for sale. The meeting was attended by local councillors.

An outcome of this meeting was that the local councillors have submitted motions on rezoning, which will be discussed in City Council sub-committee meetings to be held in September.

The motions are as follows:

“That this Council confirms its policy that “Estate Greens” open green spaces/areas in established estates be zoned “Open Public Spaces” or Landscape protection zone” to ensure such areas be fully protected against development”
(Proposer: Cllr. B.Bermingham, Cllr. M.Shields, and Cllr. F.Dennehy)

and

” That this Council proceeds with a material change to the Cork City Development, 2004 by zoning the Green on Bishopstown Road and bordered by Bishopscourt Green to the west and Bishopscourt Drive to the east, a “Public Open Space and/or “Landscape Protection Zone”"
(Proposer: Cllr. B.Bermingham, Cllr. M.Shields, Cllr.J.Buttimer, Cllr.M.Ahern, and Cllr. F.Dennehy)

One method of showing support for these motions is to sign the petition.

Evening Echo Article

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

Mark Barry of the Evening Echo has written another article on the campaign to have the Green rezoned.

The importance of Green spaces in our environment

Friday, August 10th, 2007

In the Irish Times Magazine of Saturday, 4th August 2007, Jane Powers writes in Planet Matters about the importance of Green spaces in our environment.

Planet matters

Jane Powers on cooling our cities.

By next year, for the first time, more than half of the world’s population will be living in cities, according to the United Nations Population Fund. Urban dwellers will number 3.3 billion, with the most significant increases in Africa and Asia. European cities will also grow, but not at the same rate. By 2030 the world’s urban population is expected to expand to nearly five billion people, with 80 per cent living in Africa and Asia.

Cities have a profound effect on the climate and the environment. As villages develop into towns and then cities, their average temperature increases by between two and four degrees above that of the surrounding countryside.

This “urban heat island effect” is a result of buildings and paving storing and releasing heat, and also of a reduction in vegetation. Green spaces and trees help to lower the temperature when they take in water and then gradually release it to cool the air. The processes of evaporation (from soil, water and leaf surfaces) and of transpiration (where a plant exhales or perspires water from its leaves) are rather neatly combined into one word: evapotranspiration.

Lack of green space, or “surface sealing”, also prevents rainwater from entering the soil, causing rapid run-off and leading to the danger of overflowing sewers and waterways. In city centres and high-density areas about 70 per cent of the ground is covered by buildings, roads or other impermeable surfaces. As climate change brings more extreme weather, and more instances of torrential rain, flooding in urban areas becomes a greater threat.

City heat begets more heat, as air conditioners - increasingly necessary to make buildings bearable - spew warm air into the immediate atmosphere. They also consume energy and produce carbon dioxide and other emissions, exacerbating global warming and contributing to air pollution.

Clearly, the galloping urbanisation of the planet could land us in the soup if something isn’t done. But let’s not panic. Instead let’s celebrate (and pay heed to) a team at Manchester University that have come up with a simple solution. Following a research project, using Greater Manchester as their model, they have calculated that a 10 per cent increase in green space in built-up areas will reduce surface temperatures by up to four degrees. This figure, incidentally, is equivalent to the average predicted temperature rise through global warming by 2080. Hallelujah, and glory be to the boffins in Manchester.

And, just to drive a point home, let me tell you that the team also calculated that reducing green space by 10 per cent could increase surface temperatures by 8.2 degrees by 2080. Yikes.

The future health of cities is in our hands. Get them 10 per cent greener. Get them evapotranspirating.
© 2007 The Irish Times

We would like to thank Jane Powers for her permission to reproduce this article.
View the scanned article