Cork City flooded in November 2009 |
Cork City Council has in recent days committed to investing nearly €194m on works throughout the city including a new library in Mahon, the development of the Carrigrohane Park & Ride and City Hall refurbishment. Thankfully they will also be using this money to repair the Quay Wall which has been a stain on this fine city since the floods of November 2009.
I remember the story’s. The man who woke up in his bed which was floating in the bedroom, the people who were lucky enough to get to shower in The Montenotte Hotel, the water volleyball on the road in Victoria Cross and of course who will ever forget the tiresome thankless task of struggling through the wet and cold streets with buckets or jugs of water. Yes the floods certainly left their mark on the City of Cork and its people who dared live and build on islands and marshlands and then wonder how and why they suffered such consequences. Now, almost two years on, the restoration of our civic pride has begun.
It wasn’t until after the waters receded that we saw the true destruction they had caused. Since that faithful November week we have cringed at the sight of a high tide in the River Lee. Despaired, if even for a second, at hearing the weatherman tell us to expect heavy rain. Business owners have stocked up on sandbag like defenses. For months after the floods we watched the news reports and read the papers and listened as the radio told us of the City Council’s plans to develop a new state of the art flood warning system. A Massive defensive wall structure to be built at the harbor mouth and of course simple repairs to the damaged areas of the city. Though these reports disappeared and were almost forgotten as quickly as they surfaced, the events of that terrible winter a few short years ago have not been lost in our memories.
The damaged Quay Wall needs repairing |
We all saw the photographs and the news footage of the rubber dingy being used to rescue patients and staff from the Mercy Hospital. How many weeks went by before the nearby residents of the middle parish got compensated for their homes being ruined. Did they ever receive such compensation. For almost two years we have all wondered when the repairs of the demolished Quay Wall would begin. When would we stop fearing that the high tide would rise too much and break the surface where that wall once stood. When would the vulgar fencing and construction huts be replaced by wall and road once again. Well at last that time appears to have come.
That missing wall has done nothing but remind us of an event which brought this city to a standstill. Now at last with its repair perhaps we can finally start to put some of those memories behind us.
Thanks to www.corkindependent.com
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