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Established by An Post and the Ordnance Survey of Ireland, the Geodirectory is a database of every building in the Republic of Ireland. [73] The database contains every postal address, a corresponding geographic address, the electoral division (a grouping of addresses useful for analysis and defining catchment areas of services), a system ...
A map of Ireland's routing key areas. The list of Eircode routing key areas in Ireland is a tabulation of the routing key areas used by An Post and other mail delivery services for the purposes of directing mail within Ireland. A routing key area "defines a principal post town" [1] according to An Post. There are currently 139 routing key areas ...
The Irish government announced the introduction of a postcode system, Eircode, in Ireland from 2008 [5] though An Post was against the system at the time, saying it was unnecessary. [6] The introduction of Eircodes took place on 13 July 2015, after almost a decade of delays.
Residents of some areas objected to the assignation of the next available number, "Dublin 26", for the new postal district, citing property devaluation: the higher numbered districts typically represented less affluent and less central areas. [10] An Post ultimately relented, and the western part of the district became known as Dublin 6W. [5] [11]
The BT postcode area, also known as the Belfast postcode area, [2] covers all of Northern Ireland and was the last part of the United Kingdom to be coded, between 1970 and 1974. [ citation needed ] This area is a group of 82 postcode districts in Northern Ireland, within 44 post towns and around 47,227 live postcodes.
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Dublin 8, also rendered as D8 and D08, is a postal district in Dublin.Dublin 8 is one of only two postal districts to span the River Liffey.While the majority of the district's built up areas are on the southside, it also includes northside areas such as the vast Phoenix Park. [1]
The first number is always the easting and the second is the northing. The easting and northing are in metres from the false origin. The ITM co-ordinate for the Spire of Dublin on O'Connell Street is: 715830, 734697. The first figure is the easting and means that the location is 715,830 metres east from the false origin (along the X axis).