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As of October 2024, Citylink was operating on nine routes: [3] Galway – Dublin City non-stop express (Route 660) Galway – Dublin Airport non-stop express (Route 760) Galway - Dublin Airport via Dublin City (Route 761) Galway - Ballina (Route 430) Galway – Limerick – Cork – Cork Airport express (Route 251) Galway – Clifden (Route 923)
Dublin Coach run services to Dublin Airport from Cork (via Waterford), Ennis, Limerick, Portlaoise and Killarney to Dublin Airport, with some services hubbing via the Red Cow Luas stop. [15] JJ Kavanagh & Sons operates a number of routes between Waterford, Clonmel, Limerick and Dublin City Centre, some also serving Dublin Airport.
In 2015, a morning service started which ran non-stop from Cork-Dublin. This service departs Cork Kent at 06:15 AM and arrives at Dublin Heuston in 2 hours 15 minutes, at 08:30 AM. Since then, in an extra service from Cork to Dublin than Dublin to Cork the 21:00 train from Dublin is formed of a 3+4 car class 22000 train which splits in Cork to ...
The Cork Suburban Rail network operates on three lines, and is served by 10 stations. In 2018, there were 3.46 million passenger journeys on the Cork to Dublin line (up 10% from 2017), 908,000 on the Cork to Cobh line, and 437,000 on the Cork to Midleton line (up 5.8%). [1]
Cork Airport (Irish: Aerfort Chorcaí) (IATA: ORK, ICAO: EICK) is the second-largest international airport in Ireland, after Dublin and ahead of Shannon. It is 6.5 kilometres (4 miles) south of Cork City centre, [1] in an area known as Farmers Cross. [6] In 2018, Cork Airport handled 2.39 million passengers, [7] growing by over 8% to 2.58 ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 7 March 2025. International airport near Dublin, Ireland Dublin Airport Aerfort Bhaile Átha Cliath IATA: DUB ICAO: EIDW WMO: 03969 Summary Airport type Public Owner/Operator DAA Serves Greater Dublin Location Collinstown, Santry, Ireland Opened 19 January 1940 ; 85 years ago (1940-01-19) Hub for Aer ...
These trains, which are in 3-car, 4-car and 5-car formations, replaced the Mark 3 coaches formerly in use on the routes between Dublin and Limerick, Galway and Waterford and the 2800 Class and 29000 Class DMUs on the Dublin to Sligo and Dublin to Rosslare Europort services, and on the services that do not terminate in Dublin.
A Mark 4 carriage on the Dublin–Cork railway line The original four rails logo 1987–1994 Iarnród Éireann , ( Irish pronunciation: [ˈiəɾˠnˠɾˠoːd̪ˠ ˈeːɾʲən̪ˠ] ) or Irish Rail , is the operator of the national railway network of Ireland .