h a l f b a k e r ySee website for details.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
There are according to some figures as many as 302,625 houses lying empty in the Republic of Ireland (see link if you don't believe the figure)
Without going into too many details, the Irish went a bit mad with all of the billions of Euros they got off Europe, and embarked on an unsustainable building
spree, with the banks lending loony amounts of money to all and sundry.
The results are there for all to see, and they are called Ghost Estates. There are hundreds of them scattered throughout the country and no one really knows what to do with them, except me of course.
I propose making them available to the thousands of homeless spectres, ghosts, poltergeists, etc, who are routinely driven out annually by exorcisms across the world.
A simple register would list the properties available for undisturbed haunting, and any certified exorcist would be able to purchase the deeds at a reduced price as part of their work to re-house these now homeless spectres.
Each estate would be suitably fenced off from public admission and declared occupied by malevolent spirits of every variety. The Irish are a superstitious lot, and it should keep most of them out. A few scare stories (backed up by punitive fines of course) will add to the effect.
Meanwhile, the houses will simply be allowed to rot... providing valuable shelter for endangered bats, barn owls and other creatures. Tourism will flourish for those brave enough to spend time in one of the properties made available on each estate for this purpose, as part of a new "haunted house holiday" venture, with each visitor receiving a certificate detailing the ghost of occupation and she/he/its previous record and exorcism.
All-in-all, everyone comes out happy from this solution. The houses get used; some money gets raised; wildlife get protected shelter; a new tourism venture flourishes; and if you believe in ghosts, then they get new homes, and plenty of time to plot a suitable welcome for any foolhardy visitor.
Ghost Estates in Ireland
http://www.irishcen...ates--82080852.html there are google maps of these places too [xenzag, Oct 22 2010]
One Ghost Estate
http://uk.reuters.c...UKLNE66T00M20100730 the description is perfect [xenzag, Oct 22 2010]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
[xenzag], this is utterly brilliant... and the timing couldn't be better, being as we are on the cusp of All Hallows' Eve. I regret that I have but one bun to give [+]. |
|
|
If a chain rattles in a housing estate, when there's no-one around to be frightened, does it make a sound? |
|
|
Haunting empty properties takes all the fun out of it. |
|
|
Do they have to be Irish ghosties, or can they just slip through immigration control, unnoticed? |
|
|
There are all kinds of local ghosts, and strange little creatures already residing in Ireland, including Banshees, Pixies, Little People, and of course Leprechauns, but world travellers are needed to fill the vacant properties. |
|
|
I have to wonder how the native spirits of Ireland will take this. Will they embrace immigration and work to assimilate the newcomers into the Irish landscape? If so, this might work nicely. If not, I dread the resultant poltergiest activity. |
|
|
Let's not forget the Poltergeist Irish Republican Army; The Ulster Deceased Force and, of course, Unseen Fein. |
|
|
Brilliant, you little ghoulish thing you! |
|
|
Will there be color-coded orange and green sheets for the new spirits? |
|
|
Bands won't play no more
(Too much fighting on the dance floor) [+] |
|
|
When the plumbing in an Irish house needs work, do you sing Danny Boy because of that part about the pipes, the pipes are calling? |
|
|
But more to the point, can you repossess the possessed? or the dispossessed? |
|
|
[TolpuddleSartre], do you remember the good old days before the ghost town? |
|
|
We danced and sang, and the music played inna de boomtown. |
|
| |