[Elfsea] Irish Times: Waterford bypass may be rerouted to avoid Woodstown Viking site

Danny Scott dkevinscott at gmail.com
Wed Oct 27 14:58:22 PDT 2004


Waterford bypass may be rerouted to avoid Woodstown Viking site
By Liam Reid

The Irish Times
Sat, Oct 23, 04

  The National Roads Authority is preparing contingency plans to
radically alter the proposed Waterford bypass route to avoid a major
Viking site at Woodstown, writes Liam Reid

A decision on the future of the site is expected to be made by the
Minister for the Environment, Mr Roche, after he receives a detailed
archaeological report on the site, believed to be one of the most
important Viking settlement remains discovered in Ireland.

The Minister can decide that the road could be allowed through the
site, with it being preserved "by record" similar to the situation at
Carrickmines.

Alternatively he can order that the site be fully preserved, meaning
that the new roadway will have to be changed.

While no decision can be made until the final report is completed, the
latter option is looking increasingly likely after an interim report
found the site to be of even greater significance than previously
thought.

Further tests have discovered that the site affected by the proposed
roadway is nearly 20 per cent larger than first believed.

Yesterday, a spokesman for Mr Roche confirmed that the Department of
the Environment received an interim archaeological report on the site
earlier this month, and a final report was expected within three weeks.
Mr Roche would be making a decision almost immediately on receiving the
report, he said.

The Irish Times understands that the NRA is now drawing up contingency
plans to re-route the road around the Woodstown site, if requested by
the Minister.

However, senior officials at the authority believe that this may not
delay the construction of the €200 million road, and that it could
still get underway next year.

Under new powers in the National Monuments Act, work could proceed on
other parts of the roads development while an alternative route around
the Woodstown site is identified. Planning approval, including
environmental impact and archaeological assessments may also be
required for the new section.

"If we have to reroute, it wouldn't be the end of the world for us,"
according to an NRA official.

The legislation, which was used to restart work at Carrickmines Castle
in August, has been criticised by conservationists as providing too
much power to the Minister for the Environment.

The Woodstown site is now the focus of a major environmental campaign
to reroute the Waterford bypass. Upwards of 3,000 artefacts have
already been excavated from the site on the banks of the Suir, which is
now believed to have been a town of up to 4,000 inhabitants.

It has been described by Prof Donnchadh Ó Corrain of the department of
history at University College Cork as "the most significant new find in
Viking studies in perhaps a century".

Archaeologists commissioned by the NRA have also described Woodstown as
one of the most important Viking sites in Europe.

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