
The proposed transportation map, which helps people visualize the links between various systems of public transportation.
An enterprising recent Dublin Institute of Technology graduate, Colin Broderick, has developed a very helpful map of all of Dublin’s public transport routes. Colin created a map to help people visualize various transit routes and see how they connect. And the Irish Times featured his idea yesterday!
This is truly exciting for me (a recent arrival to the city who struggles to navigate a frequently baffling bus system).
For the past three months I’ve longed for a resource like the one Colin has produced.
When my sister, Heather, visited from New York City in September, we collectively bemoaned the lack of such a visualization tool.
There has been, it seems, no comprehensive map of Dublin’s many bus routes published in recent memory. Heather and I each, individually, trekked to the Dublin Bus headquarters to request one, only to leave empty handed.
The lack of a map was truly a “gap in the existing knowledge base” here in Dublin. And someone fresh out of DIT (my host institution here in Ireland) took it upon himself to fix the situation!
In the past two months, I’ve been toying with the idea of trying to make a map like Colin’s for my own personal use. I even dreamed of sharing it with others, but I also knew I didn’t have adequate time. And I worried that I would misunderstand some of the systems and make mistakes, which would mean I couldn’t share it.
Now, my dream of having such a map will become reality.
I applaud Colin for developing and such a map–and for making it available to the rest of us.
Many thanks to Joan Cahalin, her husband (Peter Twamley), and their awesome kids (Georgie and Jox) for tuning me into this bit of news!
I snapped a few images of the map while I was with them earlier today, although I haven’t had the opportunity to study Colin’s graphic closely yet. Each day this week, the Irish Times will focus on a separate issue. Colin’s map will be “front and center” in Tuesday’s paper. I can’t wait to, as we say in the States, “read all about it.”