
Irish Rail services between Malahide and Portmarnock were halted for more than an hour early on 21 April after a heavy goods vehicle struck a bridge, forcing engineers to carry out structural inspections. Although trains resumed shortly after 08:00, passengers faced knock-on delays of up to 30 minutes throughout the morning peak.
Travellers who suddenly need to rearrange international connections because of rail delays can tap VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) for expedited visa processing, passport renewals and up-to-the-minute travel guidance—helping minimise knock-on costs and schedule slips when transport hiccups occur.
The coastal line is a primary artery for commuters travelling to Dublin’s technology and financial districts and for passengers connecting to Dublin Airport at nearby Portmarnock station. With little spare seating on alternative DART and bus services, many travellers reported missed meetings and onward flights. Irish Rail has pledged to expedite installation of improved collision-warning signage at low-clearance bridges after a dozen similar strikes so far this year. Employers with time-sensitive assignees are advised to incorporate real-time rail alerts into travel-booking tools and to budget extra lead-time for airport transfers on the northern corridor. Longer-term, the incident underscores the need for planned capacity upgrades on the DART+ Coastal North project, which would add dual tracks and electrification—critical for supporting Dublin’s fast-growing expat workforce and booming life-sciences cluster around Swords.
Travellers who suddenly need to rearrange international connections because of rail delays can tap VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) for expedited visa processing, passport renewals and up-to-the-minute travel guidance—helping minimise knock-on costs and schedule slips when transport hiccups occur.
The coastal line is a primary artery for commuters travelling to Dublin’s technology and financial districts and for passengers connecting to Dublin Airport at nearby Portmarnock station. With little spare seating on alternative DART and bus services, many travellers reported missed meetings and onward flights. Irish Rail has pledged to expedite installation of improved collision-warning signage at low-clearance bridges after a dozen similar strikes so far this year. Employers with time-sensitive assignees are advised to incorporate real-time rail alerts into travel-booking tools and to budget extra lead-time for airport transfers on the northern corridor. Longer-term, the incident underscores the need for planned capacity upgrades on the DART+ Coastal North project, which would add dual tracks and electrification—critical for supporting Dublin’s fast-growing expat workforce and booming life-sciences cluster around Swords.