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At the western end of the mall is a large Tesco supermarket. [7] There is a Sky store in the mall, [8] as well as a radio booth (known as "the pod") which is sometimes used for broadcasts by Cork's Red FM. [9] The mall also houses an Omniplex cinema. [7] With 13 screens and 2,500 seats, [10] the cinema also has the first OmniplexMAXX screen in ...
1 May – early May bank holiday. Asda store opening times will remain as normal on Saturday and Sunday (29 and 30 April). They usually open from 6am or 7pm and close around 10pm or 11pm on ...
Tesco Ireland was one of seven shops fined for failing to display prices properly by the National Consumer Agency in July 2008. [15] Tesco Ireland decided in 2019 not to make home deliveries in Tallaght due to a anti-social behaviour incidents in the area. [16] [17] [18] Tesco apologised for selling anti-Jewish literature to customers in Ireland.
The Christmas break lasts from the last school day before 23 December to the first weekday after 6 January (17–21 days). The second mid-term break is a minimum of two days to a maximum of five days duration taken in the third week of February (also called the Shrove break).
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An open top tram in Ballintemple with a Cork Electric Tramways and Lighting Company service (c.1910) Ballintemple is served by a single city bus route, number 202, which runs from Mahon, through Blackrock, Ballintemple, Cork City Centre, to Gurranabraher and Knocknaheeny. The nearest currently active railway station is Kent Station Cork.
Woolworths on Grafton Street in 1946. The first F. W. Woolworth store in Ireland opened on 23 April 1914 on Grafton Street in Dublin. Plans for an outlet in the industrial north had continued despite the outbreak of World War I, with a new opening on High Street in Belfast on 6 November 1915. After this, more stores opened in towns and cities ...
Christ Church, also known as Holy Trinity, [8] was the "main church" in Cork city by the 17th century. [ 5 ] Substantially destroyed during the 1690 Siege of Cork , the remaining structures of the early medieval church were demolished in 1716 and the current neo-classical building was completed in the 1720s.