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    18 Kommentare

    1. And to think there’s probably half the amount of pubs there was 20 years ago. My town went from having 13 pubs and two nightclubs to 5 pubs and no nightclubs.

    2. Hon Killeshandra. Our green a lovely lanes still had plenty of pubs even though 3 have shut down in recent years

    3. Aggravating-Back5963 on

      Town I grew up in once had 50 pubs today we are at 10. (Population about 5500 today)

      I remember watching reeling in the years a while back and they said during the 70s in rural Ireland there was a pub for every 250 people.

    4. Shannonbridge pubs are all pretty nice too, a good mix of actual character with comfortable modern newer additions.

    5. ForbiddenToblerone on

      Annascaul is tiny but gets a load of tourists for being a stone’s throw from Dingle.

      Also, of course, the home village of Tom Crean.

    6. I do like the depth / bar representing the per capita rate, it’s groovy and whatnot, however it is entirely redundant when you consider that the colour denotes the exact same metric.

      It would be much easier to read if the key/legend for the colour scale was included (I see you’ve already addressed that), make it a 2D plane, and even reconfigure the colour of the metric in the “Top 10” list to correspond with their colour on the map (this would make those points on the visual identifiable with the list).

      And as much as I love a “dark mode” still visual, the dark blue towns get lost here. Make the map an off-white / matted grey and switch the top value of the colour key – which is currently white for Liscannor – to red. That’s more intuitive and would provide greater contrast.

      To paraphrase: a more traditional heatmap is boring, but it’s boring and overused for a reason.

    7. JackTheTradesman on

      If you could filter by minimum number of pubs or minimum population that’d be great

    8. Thisisnotgoodforyou on

      The small ones don’t work, those pubs have a huge catchment area so the served population is much higher than the local (usually tiny village) population suggests. To eliminate this effect from the data you’d need to do it by county or limit it to major towns.

    9. Hrohdvitnir on

      Not surprised by Glengarrif, but these pubs get to prosper because they serve a larger radius of population than just the townland, while also being an incredibly popular tourist destination. The town is absolutely hopping on any good summers day.

    10. I’d love to see this data for years gone by for non-tourist areas back to around 1990. So that the town that’s lost the most pubs per capita be seen.

      One example is Dunmanway in West Cork. Back in the early 2000s had a population ~1500 and would have had around 23 pubs and a nightclub (2 Nightclubs at one stage can’t remember the exact years of nightclubs opening and closing).
      Now it’s down to 7 bars, 0 nightclubs and a population of 2k+.

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