MY FIRST VISIT WAS IN 2018
THE WATERFORD NORTH QUAYS URBAN REGENERATION PROJECT [FIRST PHOTOGRAPHED 2018]
I first explored the area in 2018 and in August 2024 I revisited the are as I had hoped that the project would be close to completion and I encountered some difficulty as pedestrian access on the river side of the road was limited or impossible or dangerous because of traffic flow. This series of photographs is from the 2018 visit but expect the 2025 collection within two or three days.
The first visit to Dock Road, Fountain Street, and Ferry Bank took place in 2018. It wasn't realised at the time that Ferry Bank is actually in County Kilkenny, not Waterford. During the visit, a lot of demolition and construction was in progress. Unfortunately, in an attempt to compensate for the extreme sunlight, most of the images captured were underexposed and couldn't be properly processed until now.
Analysing the Waterford North Quays Urban Regeneration Project: 2018-2025
The Waterford North Quays Urban Regeneration Project is a large-scale, transformative initiative designed to expand and revitalise the city centre. The observation of the area in August 2025 as a "massive construction site" is accurate, but the conclusion that the project should have been completed by now is based on an initial timeline that proved unachievable due to a confluence of complex factors. The project, as it was conceived in 2018, was not a simple construction endeavour but a comprehensive master plan, designated as a Strategic Development Zone (SDZ), intended to be an enabling framework for a new city quarter.
The delays encountered are a direct consequence of the project's inherent complexity, including the intricate alignment of public infrastructure with a separate private development, unforeseen engineering challenges—most notably the need for extensive flood defence works—and financial and procurement issues that resulted from over 110 redesign variations. Furthermore, external events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, significantly prolonged the original programme. While the project has faced considerable challenges, it is not stalled. As of August 2025, it is in a highly active and visible phase of construction, with the physical presence of the new sustainable transport bridge and the commencement of major rail and flood defence works serving as tangible proof of progress on a revised, but now well-defined, timeline.
The Vision of 2018: A Catalyst for a Regional City
In 2018, the area comprising Dock Road, Fountain Street, and Ferry Bank was a derelict former industrial and shipping site. For two decades, this 65,000 square metre site along the banks of the River Suir had been unused, consisting of old warehouses and industrial buildings that overlooked Waterford’s historic city centre. This state of disuse provided the impetus for a grand vision of urban renewal.
In February 2018, the Waterford City and County Council, following a period of statutory consultation, officially made the Waterford North Quays Planning Scheme. This plan was not a blueprint for a single building but a holistic framework for the entire brownfield site. The overarching vision for the Strategic Development Zone (SDZ) was to create a "sustainable, compact extension to the City Centre" that could accommodate a future population of 83,000 people and serve as a regeneration catalyst for the entire Waterford City Region. This foundational perspective is crucial to understanding the project’s scale and timeline. It was conceived as an enabling works contract, laying the necessary public groundwork—including new roads, bridges, and transport facilities—to facilitate a much larger private development. The project's vision of a new train station and bridge touches on only two components of a far more ambitious, strategic plan for regional growth.
The core of the 2018 public infrastructure proposals included several key elements. First, a new integrated multi-modal transport hub was planned to replace the existing Plunkett Train Station. This was envisioned as a modern, multifunctional gateway building with rail platforms, a new bus set-down area, and improved connectivity. Second, a new sustainable transport bridge was proposed to serve pedestrians, cyclists, and a shuttle bus. This bridge was designed to connect the city from the South Quays to the new North Quays SDZ, providing a critical new north-south linkage over the river. Finally, the plan included significant improvements to city centre access routes and the provision of a new link between Belmont and Abbey Roads. These projects were part of a successful application to the Urban Regeneration and Development Fund (URDF) and were planned to precede the private development, which at the time was to be led by Falcon Real Estate Development Ireland and included plans for 298 residential apartments, a 200-room hotel, and 15,000 square metres of office space. The total combined investment was estimated to exceed €500 million, with the public infrastructure acting as leverage for the private sector development.
Project Evolution and Scope Revisions
The path from the initial 2018 master plan to the current state of construction has been marked by significant evolution and scope revisions. The public infrastructure project was always intended to be developed ahead of the private SDZ development. This was a deliberate strategy to ensure the necessary enabling works were in place to de-risk the overall project for private investment. This phased model became particularly critical as the private development proposals changed. The initial plans involving Falcon Real Estate gave way to a new first phase granted to Harcourt Developments (t/a Hopcast Limited) in April 2025, which includes a revised plan for 350 residential units and two hotels. The public works had to be responsive to these evolving private proposals to ensure the two developments would be fully integrated and compatible upon completion.
The scope of the public works themselves also underwent major changes. A key example is the "Part 8 development," which was required to address design alterations, such as the provision of a southern entrance to the new transport hub. The most significant, and costly, scope revision was the need for extensive flood defence works. Initially, the project had to address a "flood defence issue right across the board," not just in the immediate vicinity of the site. This led to a multi-million-euro scheme to install a 1.1km flood defence system to make the rail line "climate-resilient" and protect both the new and existing stations from recurring flooding.
This continuous need for adaptability and revision is a central reason for the project's protracted timeline. The challenge of managing a large-scale public-private regeneration initiative is compounded by the fact that the two components are interconnected but separately managed. The requirement for the public infrastructure to be "responsive to evolving progress" and to "deal with the changes as they've come up" created a cascade of redesigns. A statutory audit report cited "over 110 redesign variations" as a primary reason for the project's financial overruns. This cascade of changes made it impossible to execute the work on a fixed tender. Instead, a significant portion of the work was undertaken at hourly rates, leading to a tripling of consultant fees to over €24 million, which prompted the council to seek legal advice to ensure procurement compliance. The observed delays are not a simple matter of mismanagement but a symptom of the inherent complexity of integrating multiple, large-scale developments within a constantly changing and challenging environment. The focus has been on "de-risking the overall project in terms of cost and programme," which has necessarily prolonged the timeline.
Analysis of Project Delays and Associated Challenges
The project was initially conceived with an ambitious four-year timeline. However, as the Director of Services for Economic Development stated, this timeline was made "completely unachievable" by a combination of "circumstances, including COVID." This acknowledgment of external, uncontrollable factors is critical to understanding why the initial timeline was abandoned.
The financial and procurement complexities represent a major cause of the prolonged schedule. A statutory local government auditor’s report from January 2025 highlighted the significant overspend on consultants, noting that fees had almost tripled from an original tender estimate of €6.7 million to "just over €24 million." The primary causes for this were the "over 110 redesign variations" and the "prolongation of the original tender period." While the project has experienced these additional costs, the Council has stated that it has "prudently managed the risk and contingency budget" and that for a project of this scale and complexity, such cost increases due to changes in scope and design are not uncommon.
Beyond the financial and administrative hurdles, the project has faced significant engineering and environmental obstacles. The most prominent of these is the major flood defence scheme. This project, which was not part of the initial plan, involves the installation of a 1.1km flood defence system, utilising sheet piled walls up to 25 metres in height and an extensive drainage network with two pumping stations. These works, which require the use of two large barges and a piling rig operating from the River Suir, have been cited as a primary reason for the temporary disruption to rail services, which will occur from late August 2025 to early 2026. The need to address this unforeseen environmental issue has a direct bearing on the project's overall timeline.
My perception of the area as a "massive construction site" in August 2025 is a visual paradox. What may appear to be stagnation is, in fact, the physical manifestation of a project moving forward at its most complex and intensive phase. The project’s delays occurred primarily in the planning, financing, and procurement stages in the years preceding the visit. By August 2025, the project has entered a new phase of accelerated physical construction. The presence of the sustainable transport bridge's superstructure, the start of major flood defence works, and the realignment of key roads are all signs of a highly active and coordinated effort. The visible disarray is not an indicator of failure but of a necessary and dynamic phase of a project finally moving from the drawing board to full-scale execution.
The North Quays in August 2025: A Detailed Status Report
As of the visit in August 2025, the Waterford North Quays site is indeed an intense hub of activity. The most dramatic and visible progress has been on the sustainable transport bridge. The steel superstructure for the bridge, fabricated in Belgium, was delivered in four sections via sea-going barges in May 2025. Its spectacular installation, which involved the lifting and positioning of the four spans by the towering HEBO 9 floating crane over the course of a week in May, was a significant engineering feat and a major milestone for the project. While the bridge deck is now fully installed, the project is not yet complete. A "first test lift" of the central bascule leaves has been conducted to allow river traffic to pass, but the bridge is still undergoing "commissioning and testing" and is not yet open to the public.
Progress on the new transport hub is also well underway. Internal fit-out, as well as mechanical and electrical installation, is progressing, and works to the platforms and rail track are continuing. A key and highly disruptive element of this phase is the commencement of major flood prevention works in late August 2025. These works, which will require the closure of the rail line to facilitate the installation of sheet piles, will cause some off-peak rail service alterations on the Dublin-Waterford line from Monday to Thursday until early 2026.
In terms of road infrastructure in Ferrybank, the works on the realigned Abbey Road and Dock Road are nearing completion. Abbey Road was due to be finished in July 2025, and Dock Road is scheduled for completion in October 2025. The realignment of Abbey Road will deliver a new section of road with increased capacity, while the original footprint will be repurposed as a cycle and pedestrian-friendly local road.
Future Outlook and Strategic Insights
The current state of construction and the project’s clear forward momentum provide a reliable basis for a revised timeline. The transport hub is now expected to be fully complete by the second quarter of 2026, with Irish Rail planning for its final commissioning and opening in early 2027. The new sustainable transport bridge is projected to be open to the public in the fourth quarter of 2026, following the completion of its integration with the wider Strategic Development Zone.
The project's strategic importance extends far beyond these infrastructure elements. In April 2025, Waterford City and County Council granted planning permission for the first phase of the private development to Harcourt Developments, a major step forward for the project. This phase is set to deliver 350 residential units, a 160-bedroom hotel, a 163-room aparthotel, office accommodation, and retail units. This private investment is anticipated to exceed €350 million and is projected to create over 1,500 jobs following its completion.
The project's long-term value outweighs the short-term frustrations of its prolonged timeline and visible disruption. The delays were not a sign of failure but were necessary to ensure a properly integrated and viable new city quarter. The public infrastructure was designed to be developed ahead of the private development and to be "responsive to evolving progress... to de-risk the overall project in terms of cost and programme." This patient and methodical approach to managing a project of this scale has secured the long-term strategic benefits for the city. The project aligns with the government's National Planning Framework to make Waterford a "Regional City of Scale" by enhancing regional accessibility, encouraging sustainable mobility, and transforming a derelict site into a vibrant urban extension. The visible construction in August 2025 is the unavoidable but necessary result of a highly complex and integrated urban regeneration initiative finally moving forward at pace.
Conclusion
The observations of the Waterford North Quays, Fountain Street, and Ferry Bank in August 2025 are a clear and accurate reflection of the state of a highly complex urban regeneration project. The area's status as a "massive construction site" is not an indication of a project that has stalled, but rather of one that has moved into its most intensive and visible phase of construction after navigating years of planning, financial, and logistical challenges.
The initial, optimistic four-year timeline from 2018 was rendered unachievable by a combination of factors, including the COVID-19 pandemic, a change in the private development consortium, and significant unforeseen engineering requirements, such as the major flood defence scheme. These elements led to a prolonged design and procurement period, resulting in over 110 redesign variations and an increase in consultant fees.
However, the project is now advancing with clear and defined timelines. The spectacular installation of the sustainable transport bridge’s superstructure in May 2025, and the commencement of critical flood defence works in August 2025, serve as tangible evidence of this progress. The project is a long-term strategic investment, with its public infrastructure elements—the transport hub and the sustainable transport bridge—expected to be completed and operational in late 2026 and early 2027, respectively. The current construction is a necessary and temporary phase that will ultimately deliver a new, sustainable city quarter, realising the long-term vision of a revitalised Waterford.
I first explored the area in 2018 and in August 2024 I revisited the are as I had hoped that the project would be close to completion and I encountered some difficulty as pedestrian access on the river side of the road was limited or impossible or dangerous because of traffic flow. This series of photographs is from the 2018 visit but expect the 2025 collection within two or three days.
The first visit to Dock Road, Fountain Street, and Ferry Bank took place in 2018. It wasn't realised at the time that Ferry Bank is actually in County Kilkenny, not Waterford. During the visit, a lot of demolition and construction was in progress. Unfortunately, in an attempt to compensate for the extreme sunlight, most of the images captured were underexposed and couldn't be properly processed until now.
Analysing the Waterford North Quays Urban Regeneration Project: 2018-2025
The Waterford North Quays Urban Regeneration Project is a large-scale, transformative initiative designed to expand and revitalise the city centre. The observation of the area in August 2025 as a "massive construction site" is accurate, but the conclusion that the project should have been completed by now is based on an initial timeline that proved unachievable due to a confluence of complex factors. The project, as it was conceived in 2018, was not a simple construction endeavour but a comprehensive master plan, designated as a Strategic Development Zone (SDZ), intended to be an enabling framework for a new city quarter.
The delays encountered are a direct consequence of the project's inherent complexity, including the intricate alignment of public infrastructure with a separate private development, unforeseen engineering challenges—most notably the need for extensive flood defence works—and financial and procurement issues that resulted from over 110 redesign variations. Furthermore, external events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, significantly prolonged the original programme. While the project has faced considerable challenges, it is not stalled. As of August 2025, it is in a highly active and visible phase of construction, with the physical presence of the new sustainable transport bridge and the commencement of major rail and flood defence works serving as tangible proof of progress on a revised, but now well-defined, timeline.
The Vision of 2018: A Catalyst for a Regional City
In 2018, the area comprising Dock Road, Fountain Street, and Ferry Bank was a derelict former industrial and shipping site. For two decades, this 65,000 square metre site along the banks of the River Suir had been unused, consisting of old warehouses and industrial buildings that overlooked Waterford’s historic city centre. This state of disuse provided the impetus for a grand vision of urban renewal.
In February 2018, the Waterford City and County Council, following a period of statutory consultation, officially made the Waterford North Quays Planning Scheme. This plan was not a blueprint for a single building but a holistic framework for the entire brownfield site. The overarching vision for the Strategic Development Zone (SDZ) was to create a "sustainable, compact extension to the City Centre" that could accommodate a future population of 83,000 people and serve as a regeneration catalyst for the entire Waterford City Region. This foundational perspective is crucial to understanding the project’s scale and timeline. It was conceived as an enabling works contract, laying the necessary public groundwork—including new roads, bridges, and transport facilities—to facilitate a much larger private development. The project's vision of a new train station and bridge touches on only two components of a far more ambitious, strategic plan for regional growth.
The core of the 2018 public infrastructure proposals included several key elements. First, a new integrated multi-modal transport hub was planned to replace the existing Plunkett Train Station. This was envisioned as a modern, multifunctional gateway building with rail platforms, a new bus set-down area, and improved connectivity. Second, a new sustainable transport bridge was proposed to serve pedestrians, cyclists, and a shuttle bus. This bridge was designed to connect the city from the South Quays to the new North Quays SDZ, providing a critical new north-south linkage over the river. Finally, the plan included significant improvements to city centre access routes and the provision of a new link between Belmont and Abbey Roads. These projects were part of a successful application to the Urban Regeneration and Development Fund (URDF) and were planned to precede the private development, which at the time was to be led by Falcon Real Estate Development Ireland and included plans for 298 residential apartments, a 200-room hotel, and 15,000 square metres of office space. The total combined investment was estimated to exceed €500 million, with the public infrastructure acting as leverage for the private sector development.
Project Evolution and Scope Revisions
The path from the initial 2018 master plan to the current state of construction has been marked by significant evolution and scope revisions. The public infrastructure project was always intended to be developed ahead of the private SDZ development. This was a deliberate strategy to ensure the necessary enabling works were in place to de-risk the overall project for private investment. This phased model became particularly critical as the private development proposals changed. The initial plans involving Falcon Real Estate gave way to a new first phase granted to Harcourt Developments (t/a Hopcast Limited) in April 2025, which includes a revised plan for 350 residential units and two hotels. The public works had to be responsive to these evolving private proposals to ensure the two developments would be fully integrated and compatible upon completion.
The scope of the public works themselves also underwent major changes. A key example is the "Part 8 development," which was required to address design alterations, such as the provision of a southern entrance to the new transport hub. The most significant, and costly, scope revision was the need for extensive flood defence works. Initially, the project had to address a "flood defence issue right across the board," not just in the immediate vicinity of the site. This led to a multi-million-euro scheme to install a 1.1km flood defence system to make the rail line "climate-resilient" and protect both the new and existing stations from recurring flooding.
This continuous need for adaptability and revision is a central reason for the project's protracted timeline. The challenge of managing a large-scale public-private regeneration initiative is compounded by the fact that the two components are interconnected but separately managed. The requirement for the public infrastructure to be "responsive to evolving progress" and to "deal with the changes as they've come up" created a cascade of redesigns. A statutory audit report cited "over 110 redesign variations" as a primary reason for the project's financial overruns. This cascade of changes made it impossible to execute the work on a fixed tender. Instead, a significant portion of the work was undertaken at hourly rates, leading to a tripling of consultant fees to over €24 million, which prompted the council to seek legal advice to ensure procurement compliance. The observed delays are not a simple matter of mismanagement but a symptom of the inherent complexity of integrating multiple, large-scale developments within a constantly changing and challenging environment. The focus has been on "de-risking the overall project in terms of cost and programme," which has necessarily prolonged the timeline.
Analysis of Project Delays and Associated Challenges
The project was initially conceived with an ambitious four-year timeline. However, as the Director of Services for Economic Development stated, this timeline was made "completely unachievable" by a combination of "circumstances, including COVID." This acknowledgment of external, uncontrollable factors is critical to understanding why the initial timeline was abandoned.
The financial and procurement complexities represent a major cause of the prolonged schedule. A statutory local government auditor’s report from January 2025 highlighted the significant overspend on consultants, noting that fees had almost tripled from an original tender estimate of €6.7 million to "just over €24 million." The primary causes for this were the "over 110 redesign variations" and the "prolongation of the original tender period." While the project has experienced these additional costs, the Council has stated that it has "prudently managed the risk and contingency budget" and that for a project of this scale and complexity, such cost increases due to changes in scope and design are not uncommon.
Beyond the financial and administrative hurdles, the project has faced significant engineering and environmental obstacles. The most prominent of these is the major flood defence scheme. This project, which was not part of the initial plan, involves the installation of a 1.1km flood defence system, utilising sheet piled walls up to 25 metres in height and an extensive drainage network with two pumping stations. These works, which require the use of two large barges and a piling rig operating from the River Suir, have been cited as a primary reason for the temporary disruption to rail services, which will occur from late August 2025 to early 2026. The need to address this unforeseen environmental issue has a direct bearing on the project's overall timeline.
My perception of the area as a "massive construction site" in August 2025 is a visual paradox. What may appear to be stagnation is, in fact, the physical manifestation of a project moving forward at its most complex and intensive phase. The project’s delays occurred primarily in the planning, financing, and procurement stages in the years preceding the visit. By August 2025, the project has entered a new phase of accelerated physical construction. The presence of the sustainable transport bridge's superstructure, the start of major flood defence works, and the realignment of key roads are all signs of a highly active and coordinated effort. The visible disarray is not an indicator of failure but of a necessary and dynamic phase of a project finally moving from the drawing board to full-scale execution.
The North Quays in August 2025: A Detailed Status Report
As of the visit in August 2025, the Waterford North Quays site is indeed an intense hub of activity. The most dramatic and visible progress has been on the sustainable transport bridge. The steel superstructure for the bridge, fabricated in Belgium, was delivered in four sections via sea-going barges in May 2025. Its spectacular installation, which involved the lifting and positioning of the four spans by the towering HEBO 9 floating crane over the course of a week in May, was a significant engineering feat and a major milestone for the project. While the bridge deck is now fully installed, the project is not yet complete. A "first test lift" of the central bascule leaves has been conducted to allow river traffic to pass, but the bridge is still undergoing "commissioning and testing" and is not yet open to the public.
Progress on the new transport hub is also well underway. Internal fit-out, as well as mechanical and electrical installation, is progressing, and works to the platforms and rail track are continuing. A key and highly disruptive element of this phase is the commencement of major flood prevention works in late August 2025. These works, which will require the closure of the rail line to facilitate the installation of sheet piles, will cause some off-peak rail service alterations on the Dublin-Waterford line from Monday to Thursday until early 2026.
In terms of road infrastructure in Ferrybank, the works on the realigned Abbey Road and Dock Road are nearing completion. Abbey Road was due to be finished in July 2025, and Dock Road is scheduled for completion in October 2025. The realignment of Abbey Road will deliver a new section of road with increased capacity, while the original footprint will be repurposed as a cycle and pedestrian-friendly local road.
Future Outlook and Strategic Insights
The current state of construction and the project’s clear forward momentum provide a reliable basis for a revised timeline. The transport hub is now expected to be fully complete by the second quarter of 2026, with Irish Rail planning for its final commissioning and opening in early 2027. The new sustainable transport bridge is projected to be open to the public in the fourth quarter of 2026, following the completion of its integration with the wider Strategic Development Zone.
The project's strategic importance extends far beyond these infrastructure elements. In April 2025, Waterford City and County Council granted planning permission for the first phase of the private development to Harcourt Developments, a major step forward for the project. This phase is set to deliver 350 residential units, a 160-bedroom hotel, a 163-room aparthotel, office accommodation, and retail units. This private investment is anticipated to exceed €350 million and is projected to create over 1,500 jobs following its completion.
The project's long-term value outweighs the short-term frustrations of its prolonged timeline and visible disruption. The delays were not a sign of failure but were necessary to ensure a properly integrated and viable new city quarter. The public infrastructure was designed to be developed ahead of the private development and to be "responsive to evolving progress... to de-risk the overall project in terms of cost and programme." This patient and methodical approach to managing a project of this scale has secured the long-term strategic benefits for the city. The project aligns with the government's National Planning Framework to make Waterford a "Regional City of Scale" by enhancing regional accessibility, encouraging sustainable mobility, and transforming a derelict site into a vibrant urban extension. The visible construction in August 2025 is the unavoidable but necessary result of a highly complex and integrated urban regeneration initiative finally moving forward at pace.
Conclusion
The observations of the Waterford North Quays, Fountain Street, and Ferry Bank in August 2025 are a clear and accurate reflection of the state of a highly complex urban regeneration project. The area's status as a "massive construction site" is not an indication of a project that has stalled, but rather of one that has moved into its most intensive and visible phase of construction after navigating years of planning, financial, and logistical challenges.
The initial, optimistic four-year timeline from 2018 was rendered unachievable by a combination of factors, including the COVID-19 pandemic, a change in the private development consortium, and significant unforeseen engineering requirements, such as the major flood defence scheme. These elements led to a prolonged design and procurement period, resulting in over 110 redesign variations and an increase in consultant fees.
However, the project is now advancing with clear and defined timelines. The spectacular installation of the sustainable transport bridge’s superstructure in May 2025, and the commencement of critical flood defence works in August 2025, serve as tangible evidence of this progress. The project is a long-term strategic investment, with its public infrastructure elements—the transport hub and the sustainable transport bridge—expected to be completed and operational in late 2026 and early 2027, respectively. The current construction is a necessary and temporary phase that will ultimately deliver a new, sustainable city quarter, realising the long-term vision of a revitalised Waterford.