The London-founded autonomous vehicle software firm has quietly become the most watched name in European deep tech, and its Dublin ambitions are starting to take shape.
Seren AI, a Grand Canal Dock-based company building real-time multilingual compliance tools for financial services, has just closed a €14 million Series A — and it's reshaping how Dublin's fintech sector thinks about regulatory risk.
A package of council directives approved this month links rezoning, infrastructure investment and employment zones in ways that will reshape how Dubliners live and work across the next decade.
A combination of persistent rent inflation, rising local charges and stalled wage growth is squeezing household finances across Dublin's neighbourhoods, with lower-income residents in areas like Ballymun, Tallaght and Clondalkin feeling the sharpest effects.
While Ballsbridge and Ranelagh grab the headlines, this northside coastal village is quietly delivering value that savvy buyers are finally cottoning on to.
From Smithfield market stalls to the allotments of Cabra, July's harvest is giving Dublin cooks everything they need to eat well without breaking the bank.
From Ranelagh deli counters to Temple Bar health shops, Dublin's plant-forward food scene is making it easier than ever to hit your protein targets without touching a steak.
A surge in creative initiatives and events is transforming the city's cultural landscape, with locals flocking to venues like the National Concert Hall and the Project Arts Centre
A flurry of planning decisions, community meetings and infrastructure moves have reshaped the conversation around Dublin's most contested urban development zone in years.
After a turbulent 12 months of congestion, construction and public debate, Dublin’s v85 traffic verification system is finally live. Here’s the road that brought us here.
As the festival prepares for its 69th year, we look at how the capital’s stages shifted from the hushed tones of the 1950s to the bold, digital-first productions of today.
Price data from Q2 2026 auction results suggests Dublin's build-to-rent boom is widening the gap between what developers are charging and what ordinary renters can actually afford.