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- Port of Waterford welcomes City Council’s commitment to South Quays development
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- Chairman optimistic about Port of Waterford’s future
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Port of Waterford welcomes City Council’s commitment to South Quays development
The Port of Waterford today welcomed the commitment of Waterford City Council to develop the South Quays in Waterford as a focal point for civic, commercial and tourist activity. The Council’s announcement comes in the wake of their successful acquisition from the Port of Waterford of a 1.35 acre riverfront car park, adjacent to the historic Clock Tower.
Stan McIlvenny, chief executive, Port of Waterford, has been a leading advocate for the regeneration of the city’s waterfront. “I am delighted to learn of the Council’s intentions for the South Quays. It builds on our own master-plan for the waterfront that we hope, in time, will transform this part of the city. I very much share Mayor O’Halloran’s vision for a ‘European-style linear park featuring a series of plazas, restaurants, galleries, bars and cafés’. This is precisely what is needed and the Port will play its part in bringing forward a number of new projects that will compliment this approach.”
The Port is well advanced in its master-planning of the South Quays and made a number of submissions to the review of the recently adopted City Development Plan advocating opportunities for riverside development projects on both sides of the river. Now that the Council has clearly stated its commitment to develop the South Quays, a number of these projects will be advanced by the Port and may be submitted in the form of planning applications later this year.
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| Chairman optimistic about Port of Waterford’s future
Ben Gavin, Chairman, Port of Waterford Company, today briefed exporters on the growth and development vision that exists for Waterford Container Terminal at Belview.
Speaking at an Irish Exporters’ Association event in Waterford, Mr Gavin said it is a particularly important time for the Port as the company invests over €10 million in an extension of the quayside at Belview.
“The current developments will give us the extra capacity we need to meet our remit as a key piece of infrastructure not only for Waterford and the southeast but for the entire country where two-thirds of the population is within 150 kilometres of our Port. The Port is also a key selling point used by IDA Ireland to attract inward investment to Waterford and the southeast region as a whole.”
Ger Downey, Munster chairman of the Irish Exporters’ Association, said it was a privilege to hold the Association’s meeting in Waterford with its rich and varied trading history.“Trade is the essence of wealth generation for Waterford city and its hinterland. Waterford must therefore continue to take the initiative for its own success, as it has done down through the centuries.”
The Port of Waterford Company is continuing this contribution to the area’s economic prosperity by the further developments which are planned for the area at Belview. French pharmaceutical company Servier has recently announced that they are to establish a €115 million pharmaceutical manufacturing facility in the area. Servier’s decision to develop in the area is, according to Mr Gavin, “a very promising beginning for the strategic development zone at Belview, which is also strengthened by private investment in the Marine Point Business Centre and storage units.”
The Waterford Container Terminal in Belview is now the main centre for the Port’s commercial activity, with 185,000 TEU (20-foot equivalent units) handled at the port in 2006, which is second only to Dublin in terms of units handled. The chairman added, “An average of 75 ships call at Waterford each month and vessels up to 200m in length can be accommodated. Our development plans will allow Waterford to cater for the ever larger vessels that our customers are investing in – part of a global shift towards increased capacity and fewer trips.
“Exporters are faced with increasing shortages in seaport capacity and most European countries are rapidly responding to these increasing demands by expanding their port infrastructures. The planned developments at Port of Waterford are therefore critically needed to enable Ireland to handle the rapid growth in international trade and to maintain the country’s place in the international supply chain.”
Mr Downey echoed the Port chairman’s confidence: “The Irish Exporters’ Association is addressing a number of key areas that will help sustain the momentum of Ireland’s current economic progress. These are improving compliance awareness to maintain Ireland’s position as the largest exporter of Life Science products in the world; achieving increased supply chain efficiencies for all industrial sectors and making strong collective representation on behalf of our members in identified areas that will improve the competitiveness of Irish trade.”
Mr Gavin concluded: “We are confident that Port of Waterford is now well-positioned to meet customer requirements and, as we roll out our expansion programme, we will continue to contribute very significantly to the Irish economy and offer an attractive counterpoint to the ever-more congested greater Dublin area.”
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| Tender Notice - April 25, 2007
Please be advised of Notice No.48875 /
Ref: APR082418
published on eTenders - www.e-tenders.gov.ie -
Provision of Surface Car Park Management Services - 1 year term with option to renew for 2 further years.
Interested parties are invited to view this notice.
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Waterford to welcome cruising golfers in August
February 16, 2007
Waterford has been named by Crystal Cruises as one of the ports that the recently revamped Crystal Symphony will call at in August as part of a cruise billed as a “true once-in-a-lifetime experience for the golf connoisseur”. The golf-themed cruise will offer guests the chance to play at Scotland’s famed St Andrews Links and some of the most challenging and scenic courses in Ireland.
The only British Isles cruise on Crystal’s 2007 schedule, the 11-day voyage on the 940-guest vessel departs London on August 20 and offers guests optional play at the Jubilee Course in St Andrews as well as a number of the finest courses in Ireland including Mount Juliet, Co Kilkenny; The K Club, Co Kildare; Harbour Point Golf Club, Cork and Royal Belfast Golf Club.
Each excursion features the chance to play 18 holes of championship golf while those taking part will also enjoy 45-minute warm-up sessions where available, a Hole-in-One competition, exclusive golfers-only parties and the option of pre-reserving all their golf excursions online before departing.
Complementing the golf adventures is the chance to attend lectures by Emmy Award-winning sports broadcaster Jim Huber and golf clinics with legendary golf champion Billy Casper. A veteran journalist of 34 years and the lead golf reporter for CNN/Sports Illustrated, Jim Huber is the host of CNN’s Pro Golf Weekly and has covered many PGA pro tournaments. Having won 51 PGA Tour victories, including two US Opens and the Masters, Billy Casper ranks sixth on the PGA Tour's all-time victory list.
Casper will be joined by PGA pro John Clark, a 35-year member of the PGA, who has taught thousands of golfers at all skill levels to improve their technique, focus on their swing and more fully enjoy the game.
Welcoming the announcement that Waterford is included on the golf cruise itinerary, Ben Gavin, Chairman, Port of Waterford said: “While it is a non-core activity, Port of Waterford is very conscious of the value of cruise ship calls to the retail, tourism and hospitality sectors across the southeast and we are committed to continued development of this business in 2007 and beyond.
“In this context, along with our partners at Waterford Crystal we have an established relationship with Crystal Cruises going back well over a decade and look forward to welcoming Crystal Symphony back in August for this special golf-centred cruise. The cruise gives Crystal’s guests the opportunity to play at many premier golf courses on a single trip and the luxury of unpacking just once! Because of the onboard activities and shore trips, golfers and non-golfers can also travel together while pursuing different interests.
“Crystal Cruises have a tremendous reputation with 11 consecutive years of ‘World’s Best Large Ship Cruise Line’ awards voted by the readers of Travel + Leisure and Condé Nast Traveller magazines. To put the level of luxury we are talking about in context, it is perhaps worth noting that more than $35m has been spent on refurbishing Crystal Symphony in the last 30 months or so.”
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Port engages Ascon for quay extension at Waterford Container Terminal
January 19, 2007
The Port of Waterford has awarded a €10m contract to Ascon Ltd to construct a 190-metre quay extension at Waterford Container Terminal.
Work will begin in mid-March and it is anticipated that the project will be substantially complete by year-end.
Ascon Ltd has been involved in infrastructure developments at Belview since the early 1990s when shipping activity first relocated from the city quays in Waterford.
Speaking as contracts were signed, Ben Gavin, Chairman, Port of Waterford said the latest extension to the quays at Belview was being advanced to meet growing customer demand.
“There has been significant growth in container and other traffic through Port of Waterford in recent years and this extension will facilitate considerable additional growth. Port of Waterford is the only major port in the State that has secured planning consent for further expansion and is therefore well placed to provide the additional capacity required by a growing economy.”
Martin Cullen TD, Minister for Transport, added: “The board and management at Port of Waterford are to be congratulated for their foresight in securing planning consents well in advance, leaving themselves in a strong position to bring forward infrastructure as and when required.
“Simultaneous to this investment in an extended quay, the Transport 21 programme will see considerable progress on the roads network in the southeast. Completion of the Waterford City Bypass, which includes the second river crossing, and the Waterford-Dublin motorway will further improve access to and from the Port at Belview in general and Waterford Container Terminal in particular.”
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Port of Waterford to fund war memorial as part of community outreach
November 29, 2006
The Port of Waterford has agreed to fund a memorial statue to be erected on the city’s south quays in commemoration of the Waterford boy who was the youngest Allied soldier to die in World War I and all Irish men and women who have died in conflicts at home and abroad.
The memorial is earmarked for a site at the junction of Henrietta St and the Quay where port activity in Waterford was historically centred before Waterford Container Terminal was established down-river at Belview.
Designed by Waterford-based artist Pat Cunningham and architect Anne Harpur, the memorial will feature a visually-striking lit sculpture and commemorate John Condon, who hailed from Wheelbarrow Lane off Ballybricken in Waterford and was only 14 when he was killed on May 24, 1915 while fighting with the Royal Irish Regiment at Bellevarde Ridge, Belgium, during the second Battle of Ypres.
Private Condon was buried at Poelkapelle Cemetery near Ypres when his body was discovered in 1923.
There has been renewed interest in the story of the boy soldier in recent years and his grave is among the most frequently visited of the thousands on the former Western Front.
Speaking after the Port board agreed to fund the memorial with an allocation of over €52,000, Ben Gavin, chairman, Port of Waterford said it was timely for John Condon and all those who have died in war in Ireland and overseas to be remembered in a formal way in the city.
“Tens of thousands of Irish men and women fought and died in the 1914-1918 conflict and the John Condon story in many ways captures the ideals that prompted many of that generation to go and fight in often horrendous circumstances. It is believed that hundreds of men born in Waterford were killed with the British Army alone while many more died with the then Royal Flying Corps, the Royal Navy and the Merchant Navy.”
The major funding for the quayside war memorial is the latest move by the Port of Waterford as part of an ongoing community outreach programme that has seen the Port provide over €220,000 in funding to worthy causes in 2004-2006.
“We take our responsibilities as corporate citizens very seriously and recognise that business success brings social responsibilities.
“The type of projects we have been able to support during the last 36 months include the Irish Youth Foundation, Little Red Kettle Theatre Company, Down Syndrome Association of Ireland, RNLI, Simon Community and the appeal funds established after the O’Regan family fire in Ballybeg and the Rising Sun trawler tragedy. We also provided €200,000 in support of Waterford’s successful hosting of Tall Ships’ Races 2005 and are again backing the 2011 host port application to Sail Training International,” Mr Gavin added.
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Largest capacity cruise ship ever to visit Waterford drops anchor at Dunmore East
September 26th
2006
Star Princess, the largest cruise ship –
by capacity – ever to visit the Port
of Waterford dropped anchor at Dunmore East
this morning (Sept 26) with 2,516 passengers
and 1,092 crew members on board.
During a day-long visit,
the cruise passengers will be brought
on shore excursions to visitor attractions
across the southeast on 48 specially hired
coaches ferrying them from and to Dunmore
East.
Destinations for shore
excursions include Waterford Crystal;
Kilkenny Castle; the Titanic Trail in
Cobh; the Dunbrody famine ship; Waterford
Museum of Treasures and Jerpoint Abbey.
Star Princess has overall
capacity for 3,300 passengers and sailed
to Waterford from Falmouth en route to
Greenock in Scotland. From there, the
ship will sail to the Faroe Islands and
on to Waterford’s sister city –
St John’s in Newfoundland –
before arriving in New York via New England.
Owned by Princess Cruises
who carried some 1.3m passengers annually
on cruises lasting from seven to 102 days,
Star Princess is 289m long and 108,806
gross tonnes. It has over 700 spacious
state rooms with balconies and an entire
deck of mini-suites while guests can relax
in four swimming pools and a Spa before
eating at one of three onboard dining
rooms and hanging out at Shooters Cigar
Bar or Skywalkers Nightclub.
Commenting on the ship’s
maiden call at Waterford, Ben Gavin, Chairman,
Port of Waterford said it was the latest
in a series of high-profile cruise ships
to make Waterford their destination of
choice.
“The arrival of
Star Princess should be a source of great
pride to all those who have worked so
hard over the years to make Waterford
a premier cruise destination.
“The influx in
late September of over 2,500 affluent
visitors will obviously provide a tremendous
late-season fillip to tourism in the southeast
and the fact that almost 50 coaches are
required to take the passengers on the
various shore excursions tells its own
story about the scale of ship we are dealing
with at Dunmore East. We also now look
forward with confidence to 2007 when Waterford
can again expect to play host to some
of the finest ships afloat.”
Star Princess is the
last cruise ship of 20 to call at Waterford
during the 2006 season and its visit coincides
with a call at Belview by Clipper Adventurer,
a 122-passenger cruise vessel.
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Supreme
Court decision welcomed by Port of Waterford |
July 13th 2006
The Port of
Waterford Company has today (July 12)
welcomed the Supreme Court decision to
uphold a judgment delivered in the High
Court in November 2005 by Mr Justice Eamon
De Valera, that it is within its legal
powers and authority in disposing of part
of Waterford’s inner port.
The judgment was delivered
in the Supreme Court this morning (Wed).
A legal challenge has
prevented the Port’s plans to dispose
of surplus lands on the north-side of
the River Suir and the way is now clear
for the sale to be completed.
The Port of Waterford
Company was represented in its defence
of the unsuccessful action taken by OF
Fishing Ltd of Kilmore Quay, Co Wexford
by Bill Shipsey S.C., Patrick Butler S.C.
and Tony O’Connor B.L., instructed
by Sean Nolan, MJ O’Connor Solicitors.
Speaking afterwards,
a Port spokesman said the company is delighted
at the outcome which upheld the rights
of the Company to sell non-core assets.
“The sale
of the North Quays will allow the Port,
which is a key piece of regional and national
economic infrastructure, to develop further.
In this instance, the land sale also clears
the way – subject to planning permission
- for a mixed use riverside development
on the North Quays and Frank Cassin Wharf
that offers tremendous potential for Waterford
and the southeast. The delay of 18 months
caused by the failed course of action
pursued by OF Fishing Ltd against Port
of Waterford Company is regrettable.”
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Port
of Waterford briefs Belgian trade delegation
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March 13th 2006
A group of transport and logistics providers
from Flanders in Belgium today (Wednesday,
March 8) visited Waterford Container Terminal
at Belview where they were briefed by Port
of Waterford executives and directors on
the attractiveness of the Port as a shipping
hub connecting Ireland with mainland Europe.
Facilitated
by the region’s inward investment
and foreign trade agency Flanders Investment
& Trade, the visit allowed Waterford
to be marketed to key decision makers
from shipping lines specialising in international
container traffic.
Successful twice-weekly
services are currently operated between
Waterford and the Port of Zeebrugge by
C2C Shipping Lines, a joint venture between
ECS and Cobelfret.
According to Ben Gavin,
chairman, Port of Waterford, “The
group’s visit to Waterford Container
Terminal gave us an excellent opportunity
to outline the unique features that we
believe combine to make Waterford the
logical choice for companies shipping
to and from Europe.
“There is a growing
appreciation for Waterford’s excellent
location as the nearest Irish seaport
to mainland Europe and – for imported
goods – our proximity to all of
the major markets on Ireland’s eastern
and southern coasts.
“This is coupled
with an increased recognition that there
need to be viable alternatives to shipping
through Dublin Port with the congestion
that entails. Another major selling point
that appealed to the group we met today
is that Waterford operates on a 24/7 basis
and offers the sort of flexibility that
isn’t found at ports elsewhere.”
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