Top Stories

Landmark Exo building at the centre of €7m construction dispute

The main contractor Bennett Construction is suing a Spanish-owned glazing subcontractor alleging defective works delayed the project and cost millions to remedy. It also claims it made payments to the subcontractor "under duress".

Barne Estate row: Anna Thomson-Moore gives emotional testimony on plans to leave Ireland

Anna Thomson-Moore fought back tears as she told the court about her five-year-old son with cerebral palsy and why the family plans to move to Australia.

O’Connell Street staple and Dublin construction firm the latest to seek Scarp rescue

The company behind Flanagan's Restaurant and Bar on O'Connell Street and Dublin construction firm JV Ledwith are the newest entrants into the scheme that aims to help small businesses avoid collapse.

The Sligo-born builder, a £6m mansion, and claims of £31m

Mark Henry was one of the most high-profile builders in Britain. Born in Sligo, his business collapsed in June 2023. Now the administrators of that firm are making serious allegations against him and family members, which they are expected to defend.

Chief commercial officer’s resignation adds to leadership upheaval at Port of Cork

Conor Mowlds is the second high-profile resignation from the State port in 18 months. FOI documents shed new light on former CEO Eoin McGettigan’s resignation last year. Meanwhile, board member Philip Smith died on Sunday.

New venture RYSE-ing: How two brothers-in-law created Europe’s first caffeinated chocolate bar

Serial food entrepreneur Tom Gannon has just invested in a new bar business called RYSE. Founded by marketing expert Ian O’Rourke and Pitt Bros co-founder David Stone it is targeting active 25 to 44-year-olds.

John Magnier

The Magnier map: How much land does the bloodstock dynasty really own in Tipp?

As John Magnier battles construction magnate Maurice Regan over the 751-acre Barne Estate, land registry records and planning files draw the first map of almost 11,000ac amassed in the Golden Vale by the family behind Coolmore.

Confident it can “fully offset tariffs”, Bausch + Lomb ploughs $765m into Irish subsidiary

How should a pharma multinational respond to the uncertainty unleashed by the Trump administration? Invest more in Ireland, the contact-lens and eye-drop giant appears to have decided.

Top Voices

Is there a monetary tsar in the White House?

The United States is now in the unprecedented position of being the issuer of an unanchored global reserve currency. However reluctantly, the rest of the world is now in the unenviable position of being the user of the unanchored US dollar.

Haunted by the Celtic Tiger: How old myths still shape Ireland’s housing crisis

To tackle a national emergency – a housing deficit of 300,000 homes and growing each year – we need to pay less attention to national myths and more attention to good policymaking.

Flight plan for growth: Part three – Strategically expand aviation MRO capability on the island of Ireland

In 2023, the maintenance, repair and overhaul market globally was valued at $25 billion and is growing at a compound annual growth rate of three to five per cent. Here is a plan for how Ireland can boost its presence in this area.

Paul McArdle: How to navigate the culture map of your business

The power of your communication is not necessarily what you say, it is what your colleague hears. In a multicultural business, this gap can widen.

Multinational tax news looks too good to be true – yet it is: Rewinding the week that was

US firms show no sign of retreating from Ireland as Washington makes the temporary tax advantages introduced by Trump in 2017 permanent. Corporation tax is now set for another record year.

Dion Fanning: Kneecap, the BBC and the battle over who gets to speak

The backlash against Glastonbury performers Bob Vylan and Kneecap has reignited old battles over media bias, public speech, and the BBC’s uneasy role in navigating culture, politics and power.

Ian Kehoe: Examinership, Scarp, and restructuring in an uncertain world

Powerscourt Distillery may yet pull through, as might Fade Street Social and Captain Americas, but they’re now part of a growing cohort navigating the path between collapse and survival.

Byron Fry: Ireland’s Cern membership must turn scientific collaboration into economic growth

Cern membership should not be seen as a final milestone but rather as a launchpad to help deliver long-term economic advantage. Existing members have already shown the way.