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Live at the Marquee is a season of music concerts and other live performance events organised by Aiken Promotions in a large marquee in Cork, Ireland, every summer since 2005. A concert is held most evenings with the festival usually running from the end of May to late June/early July; tickets for each night are sold separately, with varying ...
In October 2007, plans were announced which proposed to redevelop Páirc Uí Chaoimh into a 60,000-seat sports and concert venue in conjunction with the Cork Docklands redevelopment which was estimated to cost over €30m. [39] If these plans had gone ahead, Cork would have had the second largest stadium in the country behind Croke Park. This ...
The park is approximately 12 acres in size and contains a pond, the Cork Public Museum, sculpture trail, bandstand, a café and a large children's play area. [5] [6] The area of the park is joined to Sunday's Well across the River Lee by Daly's bridge (a pedestrian suspension bridge known locally as the "Shakey Bridge").
Musgrave Park, known as Virgin Media Park for sponsorship reasons, [5] is a rugby football stadium in the city of Cork, Ireland. The ground is situated on Pearse Road in Ballyphehane . The ground is named after Jimmy Musgrave, a past-president of the Irish Rugby Football Union . [ 6 ]
Croke Park, the largest stadium of any kind in Ireland.. The following is a list of stadiums used by the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA).The stadiums are ordered by capacity; that is, the maximum number of spectators each stadium is authorised by the GAA to accommodate.
Croke Park has the largest capacity of any stadium in Ireland and the third largest in Europe. The following is a list of sports stadiums on Ireland.This includes stadiums in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
Cork International Film Festival, also known as CIFF or the Cork Film Festival (Irish: Féile Scannán Chorcaí), [3] is a film festival held annually in Cork City, Ireland. It was established in 1956 as part of An Tóstal, and is Ireland's oldest and largest film festival. [4] It is typically held in November. [2]
Cork GAA faced a rival bid from Cork City F.C. and during the complex bidding process, they remained anonymous, using three sets of solicitors and making two bids. [27] [29] [30] Cork GAA subsequently renamed the ground Páirc Uí Rinn in honour of Christy Ring, a former Cork and Glen Rovers hurler. It took four years for the Cork GAA to ...