Category: Business

The 54th annual National Skills Competition kicks off at CIT and DIT with Snickers Workwear

MEDIA RELEASE

The 54th annual National Skills Competition kicks off at CIT and DIT with Snickers Workwear


 

 

Apprentices from all over Ireland will compete over three days in 21 trades; the National Champions will then represent Ireland at WorldSkills London 2011

4th April, 2011, Dublin, Ireland: The 54th annual National Skills Competition starts on Monday when apprentices from all over Ireland will converge on Dublin Institute of Technology and Cork Institute of Technology to compete in an intense three day event. Sponsored for the 6th year in a row by respected clothing manufacturer Snickers Workwear, the event aims to find the National Champions to represent Ireland in each of the 21 trades on show.

Since the 1950s the National Skills Competition has tested every aspect of the skills and workmanship of apprentices, in a high pressure environment. The winners will then have the honour of representing Ireland and their respective trades in what has been dubbed ‘Olympics for tradespeople’ – the prestigious WorldSkills London 2011 in October.

David Macken, Managing Director of Snickers Workwear said: “Just like the 1980s we are seeing Ireland export its tradespeople abroad, so it’s vital that we stop this skills’ drain and support Irish businesses. This week the apprentices will receive three days of intensive testing of their skills and craftmanship, which will ensure only the best competitors can win the title of National Champion in their trade and go on to represent Ireland on the World stage.”

WorldSkills London 2011 will test the skills of the Irish Champions against the best tradespeople from 53 countries across the globe and the chance to be crowned a World Champion. In previous years Ireland has performed particularly well, coming second at WorldSkills Calgary 2009; winning five medals overall, including two Golds. This year they hope to go one better and win the competition outright.

Irish apprentices have proven that they have some of the highest levels of workmanship and WorldSkills London 2011 provides us with a fantastic opportunity to demonstrate this at a global level.” added David Macken, “we have an enviable record at WorldSkills where we’ve won the Gold Medal for Automobile Technology in three out of the last four years and also won Gold last time in Aircraft Maintenance. Ireland came second overall, that’s an incredible achievement for such a small country.”

The National Skills Competition 2011 is launched at the Gresham Hotel in Dublin on Monday 4th April. The competition commences Tuesday (5th) and finishes on Thursday (7th) when the judging will take place. The event culminates with awards’ ceremonies on Friday 24th April in The Mansion House, Dublin and CIT in Cork.

To qualify for National Skills, competitors have had to win their local round of National Skills, so they really are the best apprentices in the country.

Twenty one different trades are being tested including: Aircraft Maintenance; Automobile Technology; Autobody Repair; Bricklaying; Carpentry; Car Painting; Cookery; Heavy Vehicle Mechanics; Painting & Decorating; Plumbing; Polymechanics; Plastering and Sheetmetal Work, amongst others.

Snickers Workwear will also provide all the clothing for the competitors, who will be kitted out from head to toe in durable stylish gear from Europe’s largest workwear manufacturer.

For information on World Skills 2011 please see: www.worldskillslondon2011.com

For more information please contact Simon Palmer of Republic PR; tel: 01 282 2504, email: simon@republicpr.ie, Twitter: @simonprepublic.

About Snickers Workwear

Snicker Workwear manufactures and provides workwear for professional tradespeople. Their products are renowned for their quality, function and innovative solutions. The company was founded in Sweden in 1975 and since then has grown strongly so that today, Snickers Workwear is one of Europe’s leading brands in work wear, and is represented in 15 countries.

Snickers was founded by Matti Viio who worked as an electrician from 1959 to 1972 Whilst in those years working methods, technology, materials and tools evolved, but workwear was still the same as in the mid-nineteenth century. Workwear failed to fill modern requirements concerning function, comfort and design with manufacturers showing no interest in the workers real needs. In the end Matti Viio designed his own garments to work in.

Sophisticated testing and quality control procedures are carried out at every stage of the process, from the moment a new design leaves the drawing board through to final quality certification. Snickers Workwear makes relevant functions on durable and reliable garments to fit the roughest conditions. All functions are tested by our end-customers.

The spirit of Snickers Workwear is the same as it was when the company started. Snickers Workwear has always solved functional problems for professional needs. A combination of professional know-how and professional pride and self-esteem. Snickers Workwear’s motto is hard-wearing timeless garments with good design.

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Shane Curran on RTE’s The Late Late Show

The main man from Global Flood Solutions, Shane Curran made a star appearance last week on RTE’s The Late Late Show Ireland’s most watched TV programme. RTE wanted examples of Irish entrepreneurs and had heard about the success that Global Flood Solutions has been having exporting their flood protection product the Big Bag Flood Defence System.

GAA fans may recognise Shane from his days play Inter-County football for Roscommon Town.

Here’s a video of the performance

Applications for clinical positions/jobs at Cork Medical Centre private hospital, Mahon, Cork.

You may have heard or seen in the national news today the story regarding 100 jobs that have been announced at Cork Medical Centre private hospital in Cork, which is being carried on RTE TV and radio; RTE’s website http://www.rte.ie/news/2011/0119/jobs-business.html; Newstalk; Red FM; and 96FM, as well as in The Irish Independent; The Examiner; and on TheJournal.ie etc. The roles that are being recruited are for clinical staff in the following departments: nursing, theatre, laboratory, radiology, and pharmacy.

There is a Recruitment Open Day for clinical staff being held at Cork Medical Centre this Saturday, 22nd January, between 12pm and 3pm. Where you can bring along your CVs, meet the management and tour the facility.

If, however, you can’t attend the recruitment day in person then that’s no problem, just send your CVs to Siobhan Kennedy, HR Manger to hr@corkmedicalcentre.com.

Cork Medical Centre is based in the City Gate development, which is adjacent to the Mahon Shopping Centre in Cork City, two minutes from the South Ring and Jack Lynch Tunnel.

For further details please call 021 601 3200 or go to http//:www.corkmedicalcentre.com

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100 new jobs for Cork Medical Centre – Clinical Recruitment Day 22nd January, 2011.

Cork Medical Centre (CMC)

Cork’s newest private hospital, the Cork Medical Centre, has announced it is now commencing it’s second stage of recruitment and is looking to fill a further 100 clinical staff roles. A Clinical Recruitment Day is being hosted by the hospital this Saturday, 22nd January from 12pm to 3pm.
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Please bring along your CV and meet the management team if you would like to apply for a role in Nursing, Theatre, Radiology, Laboratory and Pharmacy. Please call 021 601 3200 for further details.
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Location: Cork Medical Centre private hospital, City Gate, Mahon, Cork
Time: 12:00PM Saturday, January 22nd, 2011.

The atrium of the Cork Medical Centre, Mahon, Cork.

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Global Flood Solutions featured in The Irish Times’s Business section

For anyone that missed it, here is the coverage of the Global Flood Solutions deal from the Irish Times yesterday.

 4th January, 2011.

Global Flood Solutions bag's UK deal - The Irish Times coverage (click on image to zoom for more details).

Russian Hope For Irish Investors

There was a great article on Appreciating Assets in The Sunday Business Post’s Property section. The front page story and page two focused on their niche poperty agency which connects Irish owners of overseas property with Russian investors. Russians are now oe of the few nationalities still investing in overseas property, partcularly in countries like Bulgaria.

Dylan Cullen of Appreciating Assests started working there on commercial investments in the mid noughties and was asked by his Bulgarian contacts if he knew any Irish and British investors who owned property there. The problem for the Bulgarian was and still is that they get contacted Russian investors wanting to buy property, but unlike the Irish, Russians will not buy off-plan and most of the newly completed property there is owned by Irish and British investors. This is where Appreciating Assets come in, they help owners of overseas property find Russian buyers.

Here is the full article.

The Sunday Business Post – Russian hope for Irish investors
21 November 2010 By Michelle Devane 

The Irish obsession with overseas real estate became so extreme that, at the height of the market, people were buying properties abroad without ever stepping foot in the country where they were purchasing.

These investors found it was very simple process to buy overseas properties, but it’s a different story trying to sell them.

Thousands of Irish people bought overseas properties in the last decade, and many are now suffering losses as a result of the collapse in property prices and economic deterioration across Europe.

Instead of heading abroad on inspection trips to buy property as they did in the past, an increasing number of Irish people are now trying to sell their overseas investments – that’s if construction of the property was completed in the first place. 

An increasing number of second-hand holiday properties throughout Europe are coming back on the market, as overseas owners realise that they can no longer afford to pay second mortgages.

In many cases, the Irish invested between 2000 and 2007 when prices were spiralling.

Those who invested in later years are, in many cases, facing financial problems, and cannot afford to hold on to the property hoping for the economy to improve.

The Irish are not the only investors in this predicament. 

An estimated 1.2 million Spanish holiday homes are for sale, owned by a wide range of international investors.

Few people, except the very wealthy, are in the market for a holiday home, despite drastic price reductions.

There’s no longer a strong resale market for second-hand properties as Irish and British investors, who once dominated sales, have stopped buying.

Dylan Cullen, managing director of property investment firm Appreciating Assets, realised that Irish investors would have to look to other markets in their attempts to sell overseas investments.

Three years ago, he began helping Irish and British overseas property investors to sell their assets.

The firm specialises in selling Bulgarian investment properties, to Russian investors in particular.

Cullen has experience in a number of overseas markets including Bulgaria, the Czech Republic and France. He began investing in the Bulgarian commercial property market in 2006 when his friend, who was dating a Bulgarian, convinced him to go to the country to examine its investment opportunities. 

‘We bought and sold, made investments, gave seed capital to builders, filled the gap and were paid handsomely for it,” Cullen said.

He did not develop properties in Bulgaria, but managed to build contacts in the property market. ‘‘Because of the level of activity that wealthy Russian investment funds had in Bulgaria at the time, we ended up with a good contact list of estate

agents and developers in Bulgaria and estate agents in Russia,” he said.

‘‘As the market started to turn, we started getting contacted by people finding it difficult to sell their properties and asking for help.

We looked at our list of contacts and realised we could offer a service.” That was in late 2007. 

Since then, Appreciating Assets has focused on reselling residential properties and acting as a broker between Irish and British sellers, and estate agents in Russia. 

The company has recently expanded to include other Russian investment hotspots such as Spain and Portugal.

For a fee of €50 per month, the firm creates a sales brochure for its clients that’s then marketed to Russian and Bulgarian estate agents. Appreciating Assets’ website becomes a database for the Russian estate agents, and the company receives commission for any transactions.

Cullen said that the company has sold over 230 property in the past two years for its clients. 

The Dublin-based firm employs full-time professional valuers and agents in Bulgaria and Russia. In total, it has 11 employees.

‘‘We’ve two full-time staff in Russia who call estate agents to promote the properties.

We’ve got staff in Bulgaria who are on the ground, who go check out developments for us, talk to local agents [and] get the local knowledge of what properties are actually changing hands at.”

Cullen said that many of his clients were keen to sell their overseas assets because they had built up equity in their Irish properties to cover these purchases. Cullen said that, in many cases, his clients’ Bulgarian property was their only unencumbered asset.

‘‘There’s a lot of value there for people if they can sell their Bulgarian property; €50,000 in Ireland today is worth €80,000 three to four years ago. 

That’s [probably] their last unencumbered asset; they can choose what they wish to do with that property – not like if they sell their house in Dublin. If they sell that, the bank takes back the money.”

Cullen said one of his clients had just completed the sale of a two-bedroom apartment at Sunset Resort in Bourgas on the Black Sea coast in Bulgaria.

She sold the property for €55,000 to a Russian investor.

‘‘I can’t remember the last time we sold to someone other than a Russian. The Russian economy is very strong. I genuinely consider the Russians are the new Irish, in that there’s a huge amount of them that are only feeling some sort of financial security in recent years.

There’s a real rising middleclass over there,” he said.

‘‘Historically, the Russians are also very comfortable in Bulgaria. If you go down to the Black Sea during the summer months, there’s a huge mixture of Russians, Irish and English.”

Russian buyers are showing resilience to worldwide trends of negatively towards property investment. 

According to CIA research, the Russian economy is faring much better than many other European countries, despite having recorded a fall in GDP of 7.9 per cent in 2009. It was hit hard by the 2008-2009 global economic crisis, as oil prices plummeted and foreign credits that Russian banks and firms relied on dried up. 

However, the economic decline appeared to bottom out in mid-2009 and, by the second half of the year, there were signs that the economy was growing, albeit slowly. 

The International monetary Fund (IMF) has forecast that within three years the Russian economy will be the second largest in Europe after Germany. 

The IMF expects the Russian economy to grow by 4.25 per cent in 2010.

Owning international property is fast becoming the status symbol of choice for Russia’s middle-class, just as it was in Ireland during the economic boom. 

Russian buyers are not attracted by off-plan properties, instead they want completed units, so they represent a potential market for Irish sellers.

Liam Bailey, head of residential research at Knight Frank in London, said Russian buyers were leading the demand for prime property in London and other European cities. ‘‘Russian buyers have had a considerable influence in London in the last decade.

They’ve been buying in prime market such as the south of France, the Alps, Switzerland and to an extent in Paris,” said Bailey.

‘‘The Russian economy is still going strong; their drive is to buy property and they’d rather buy it overseas than at home. There are many Russians looking to acquire assets at lower prices, and they are interested in Bulgaria as a leisure destination.

‘‘Wealthy Russians are targeting the south of France, but the middle classes are buying in Bulgaria because of its close proximity, and it’s low prices,” he said. ‘‘Eighteen months ago it wasn’t known how far the Bulgarian market would fall, but now investors are more confident about prices and there’s some stability.”

Ac cording to Knight Frank’s research, prices have fallen by 32 per cent in Bulgaria since the peak of its property market in the third quarter of 2008.

Bailey said property prices had been dropping quite rapidly until June of this year, but prices seemed to be stabilising, as they slipped only slightly in the third quarter. ‘‘It would appear the bottom of the market has been reached there and there’s more confidence among buyers,” he said.

Figures released last month by Russian property website www.1-property.ru found that Bulgaria was the most popular destination for investment out of 30 countries among those surveyed on its website.

During July and August, the website recorded 359,173 searches, with 60 per cent of these searches for apartments and condos.

The Black Sea resorts of Sunny Beach and Sozopol came first and third, respectively, in its top regional table.

The second most popular destination for investment was Spain, with its coastal resort of Costa Blanca coming second in the regional table. 

The majority of those surveyed were interested in purchasing properties within the €50,000 and €150,000 price bracket.

Cullen was adamant that property could be sold in the downturn, and said investors had to be realistic about price.

‘‘There’s no point dwelling on it. One of the things I say to customers constantly is that I cannot guarantee I’ll sell your property. I will put your property with a number of estate agents that have a track record in selling properties like yours, but I’m not guaranteeing I’ll sell your property,” he said.

He said that Appreciating Assets did not advocate selling overseas properties at distressed prices and that even though prices were down, sellers could get the current value for their asset if it was marketed well and in very good condition.

He said it was a ‘‘huge misperception’’ that everyone that bought property in Bulgaria or overseas lost money. ‘‘That’s wrong. I’m not saying they made huge profits, but there’s a lot of people getting out with roughly what they paid, or taking a small haircut. 

Then there’s people who bought ridiculously, and that’s life.”

In many instances, he said his clients had to sort out major issues with their properties before they could sell them.

Like Ireland, difficulties with poor management companies are one of the most common issues that need to be rectified before they can sell. Cullen said one investor took control of the management company at a development which was mostly Irish-owned, because proper up-keep of the communal areas was not being maintained.

Once the communal areas were made attractive, he was then able to sell the property on.

‘‘My advice for someone who wants to sell is to find an agent you can have a decent rapport with.

Be realistic about your asking price, shop around – get your property valued by a number of companies, don’t just take one person’s word for it.

‘‘Ask the questions about the value of selling it quickly or over a few months; ask the agent how you can get more money for it and what you can do with the property to improve the chances of it selling,” he said.

For further information, contact Appreciating Assets on 01-6141300 or e-mail in fo@appreciatingassets.ie.

The Launch of Cork Medical Centre private hospital on RTE TV & TV3 News

The Cork Medical Centre had a very successful launch on Friday with over 400 people attending for a 10.30am launch , not an easy task getting all those people there at the best of times. There was extensive TV and radio coverage. I did arranged pre-recordings with Dr Joe Sheehan on the Thursday afternoon before the launch with RTE’s Morning Ireland show and Newstalk’s Breakfast. Both RTE TV and TV3 attended the event and it was covered extensively on their news programmes.

With any event like this there is always a danger that something unexpected might happen on the day, which can result in the camera crew being called away to cover, therefore, to minimise the risk of this happening I arranged with RTE to come in the week before the launch in order to get generic footage of the hospital and facilities ‘in the can’ in advance. This gave us some comfort that should something happen on the day then RTE could always use the footage and overlay with audio commentary.  However, in the end there were no other sudden news items and the launch went well with RTE using footage of the launch and an interview with Dr Sheehan, which they combined with the shots they took the week before.

Here are links to the RTE and TV3 coverage that are hosted on their websites

RTE Six One News covers the launch of Cork Medical Centre

http://tv3.ie/videos.php?video=28193&locID=1.2.&page=17

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Public Open Day at Cork Medical Centre 20th November, 2010.

Every wanted to see the inside of an operating theatre? Check out a CT or MRI scanner? Then now’s your chance!

Cork Medical Centre, Ireland’s newest hospital, is having a Public Open Day on Saturday 20th November. Everyone is welcome to visit this state-of-the-art-facility between 10am and 4pm – there will be hospital tours throughout the day.

The €90m private hospital is the first new private hospital to open in Cork for 90 years. Opened in Mahon last month, it is the first hospital in Ireland to provide all single ensuite bedrooms. This is the last chance for visitors to see the six cutting edge Opitz and Flierl operating theatres, the 75 single ensuite bedrooms, or get up close with the hospital’s CT and MRI scanners.

Free blood pressure tests will be provided to all visitors and face painting will be on hand for children.

It was recently announced that the Cork Medical Centre is to be covered for 80% Quinn Healthcare and Aviva customers; both companies will be on hand during the Open Day to give people advice on healthcare and answer any questions they have about their health plans, taking out a health insurance plan or how to switch providers. They’ll also be running giveaways for prizes on the day.

According to Philip Sheehan, the Chief Operating Officer of Cork Medical Centre: “The hospital is very special, this type of facility has not been provided in Cork before. We want to use the Public Open Day on Saturday 20th November to show the people of Cork what fantastic facility they have on their doorstep. We need to close the operating theatres to visitors soon, so this is the last chance for people to see the inside of an operating theatre and the incredible scanners that we have here.”

For further details please call the hospital on 021 601 3200. The last tour of the day will start at 3pm.

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Leading economist who predicted housing crash says now is time to buy

Derek’s Brawn’s new property price calculator CompareBuy2Rent.ie was featured in the Irish Independent today in a piece written by the Personal Finance Editor, Charlie Weston. The story also featured in the Business News by Marget Ward on Newstalk this morning.

Derek Brawn renowned property author in a ghost estate

A link to the article on The Irish Independent’s website is here and is has been pasted in below too.

Leading economist who predicted housing crash says now is time to buy

By Charlie Weston Personal Finance Editor

Wednesday November 03 2010

AN economist who was the only person in the property industry to label the housing market a bubble said yesterday that now is the right time for new buyers to enter the market.

Derek Brawn, whose book on the property market predicted the bursting of the bubble, said first-time buyers should buy now once they find a property at the right price.

The optimal time to buy a house was not at the bottom of the market but just before the market hit the bottom, Mr Brawn said.

A year before the bottom of the housing market is the ideal time to buy, he said.

Mr Brawn, who has launched a house price calculator at www.CompareBuy2Rent.ie, added: “House prices are only one factor that people should consider when choosing whether to buy a house now or wait for further reductions.”

The other factors include benefits of paying off the capital amount on a mortgage, plus the fact that homeowners receive tax relief on mortgage interest.

“People need to consider both these benefits and factor in further house price drops, so they can buy now — but at the right price,” the former economist with an estate agency chain said.

Mr Brawn, whose book ‘Ireland’s House Party: What the Estate Agents Don’t Want You to Know’ made him the scourge of the property industry, said renters were missing out on mortgage tax relief.

Mr Brawn gave an example of a three-bed semi for sale in Kildare for €200,000.

A couple with a €20,000 deposit who are now renting a similar property for €850 a month should buy now if they can get the price down to €183,000.

This is based on a likely further decline in house prices of 15pc over the next five years, with a rise in European interest rates, calculations on CompareBuy2Rent suggest.

- Charlie Weston Personal Finance Editor

Cork Medical Centre’s official opening

15th October, 2010.

CORK’S FIRST PRIVATE HOSPITAL IN 90 YEARS OPENS ITS DOORS

Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheàl Martin TD officially

opens the €90mCork Medical Centre.

Cork Medical Centre (CMC)

Ireland’s most advanced hospital, the Cork Medical Centre (CMC), was today officially opened by Minister for Foreign Affairs, Micheàl Martin, at City Gate in Mahon, Cork. The new €90m facility is operated by Sheehan Medical and is the first private hospital to open in the city for 90 years.

CMC will provide a huge boost to the local economy employing 525 people in the 5 star facility. It is the first hospital in Ireland to come with entirely single en-suite bedrooms, 75 in all, with 25 day patient beds. When fully operational Sheehan Medical expects to cover 39,000 patient treatments per year.

Extending to 135,000 sq ft it has 6 Opitz & Flierl ‘ultra-clean’ operating theatres; all fitted with the latest infection control and using advanced surgical techniques combined with the most cutting edge technology. This state of the art facility will also be fitted with next generation IT systems, such €9m of Siemens advanced diagnostics technology, including the first an Artis Zee Biplane system in Europe[1].

CMC features all single bedrooms with ensuite shower rooms.

Speaking at the launch today Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheàl Martin TD said: “The Cork Medical Centre is a world class facility. As well as providing medical care CMC represents a major boost to the local economy by providing direct jobs and demand for services in local communities. The centre will be accessible to the majority of health plans and is an important asset for Cork. I want to wish all the team at CMC every success into the future.”

Dr Joseph Sheehan, the renowned surgeon, has returned from the US after 35 years to become CEO of CMC; speaking at the launch he said: ‘‘We have been planning a new hospital in Cork for several years so the opening of CMC marks the successful end of a long process for us. Cork has missed out on new facilities for almost a century, and there is a major shortfall in the provision of operating theatres in the Munster region; Dublin’s catchment area has over two and half times more private operating theatres, despite having a similar population. Our day theatres are already 75% booked up; therefore, meeting this important surgical demand in the south of the country will be our main priority.”

Infection control is at the forefront of the design and procedures at CMC. The fully single rooms are not just for comfort, they are integral to stopping the spread of infections. Other elements include infection resistant fittings and fixtures. Infection control protocols ensure all patients are swabbed for MRSA on entry to the hospital and put in one of the four isolation rooms if tests are positive. Each isolation room has its own air handling system and negative air pressure, which minimises the risk of air borne infections leaving the isolation rooms. More details below.

5 Star facility with6 operating theatres

CMC was approved by Aviva health insurance recently and is accessible by 80% of their customers. Negotiations with Quinn Insurance and VHI are in the final stages and expected to be completed shortly.

Based in the City Gate development in Mahon the location is now emerging as an important medical hub for Cork. The Cork Medical Centre is complemented on site by the largest VHI Swiftcare Clinic in Ireland, which is already referring patients to the new hospital. City Gate also houses the VHI Medical Centre and the national headquarters of the Health Information & Quality Authority.  The site is strategically located next to Mahon Point Shopping Centre close to Cork’s South Ring. In total the development has 330,000 sq ft of high quality floorspace with 900 free car parking spaces.

For further information please contact: Simon Palmer, at Republic PR on + 353 (0) 851 341 761 or email: simon@republicpr.ie

NOTES TO EDITORS

Infection Control Facts

  • CMC will be the first hospital in Ireland to have all single bed rooms (73) – crucial to helping reduce the transmission of infections.
  • Everyone entering the hospital will be swabbed for MRSA on entry. If tests are positive they will be put in one of the isolation rooms until it is removed.
  • There are four isolation rooms in the facility, one in each of the three wards and one in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). Each isolation room is mechanically ventilated with negative pressure and HEPA filtration (High Efficiency Particulate Arresting filters) to ensure airborne infections do not leave the room.
  • CMC has six Opitz & Flierl operating theatres with stainless steel doors that are kick operated to reduced hand borne infections.
  • The Theatre and Endoscopy operating room walls are constructed of stainless steel modular panels coated with anti-microbial powder.
  • HEPA filter canopies over each operating table, and Ultra Clean-Laminar Flow for Orthopeadic procedures, push air born infection onto the floors.
  • The theatre department is designed with two separate goods lifts for clean goods in one way and waste out the other.
  • Similarly patients enter each theatre in one door and leave via another, thus reducing risk of cross contamination.
  • Each of the four main operating theatres has a HEPA filter canopy over each operating table, two of which are Ultra Clean-Laminar Flow for Orthopeadic procedures
  • All the clinical wash hand basins throughout the facility have sensor taps to make every opportunity available to staff to minimise the chances of infections spreading
  • There is MRSA resistant glass in all the en suite bathroom pods and the back splashes for all of the sinks in the hospital.
  • There are 14 different air handling units used for heating and ventilating the facility, that are controlled by a state of the art Siemens Building Energy Management System (BEMS). The BEMS system also monitors and controls the temperature of all hot and cold water services insuring water reaches each tap at the correct temperature. All pipe work runs have been designed and installed to minimize dead legs thus reducing risk of legionnaires disease.
  • The day-care Endoscopy Department has 2 No. state of the art Wassenburg pass through scope sterilizers complete with Hot RO water system and full computerised traceability system.

Background to Sheehan Medical

Sheehan Medical was set up to operate private hospitals in the UK, Britain and mainland Europe. The company is operated by Chief Executive, James Sheehan, and his father Dr Joseph Sheehan. Sheehan Medical’s aim is to bring best practice in US medical techniques and standards to Ireland. The company prides itself in combining the operation of first class medical facilities with a successful business model. The unique share holding structure allows doctors and consultants to buy into the ownership of their hospitals and share in the financial success.

Chairman Dr Joseph Sheehan, along with his brother Dr Jimmy Sheehan, both Dublin natives, were two of the founders of the Blackrock Clinic in Dublin, which opened in 1984. In January 2006, he was part of a small group that purchased the controlling interest in the Blackrock Clinic from BUPA. An €80m expansion project is currently underway.

In 2004 he again partnered with his brother Jimmy to open the Galway Clinic, which received international recognition and re-established Dr. Sheehan’s commitment to raising healthcare standards through dedication to quality improvement and technological advances.

An active surgeon for over 35 years, Dr. Sheehan was the Chairman of Orthopedics at Central Dupage Hospital from 2004- 2006, which he led to be recognised as one of the top 50 Orthopaedics Departments in the US for 2007 and 2008 (US News and World Report). During his tenure the hospital implemented the most cutting – edge medical treatments in the world, including the Interventional Radiology Stroke Department and the Proton Treatment Cancer Centre (one of only 7 in the world for treating patients)

He is now an Associate Professor of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation at Loyala University Medical School in Ilinois, USA. Joseph is also currently in private practice in Chicago where he performs general orthopaedics and specialises in joint replacement and reconstruction.Chief Executive, James Sheehan, specialises in the administration of medical care from the science to the management side. A native of Chicago he moved to Ireland in 2002 to step into his father’s role as project manager and co-developer of the Galway Clinic (that had started in 2001) in addition to taking over his role as Director of the Blackrock Clinic.

Following his time at the Galway Clinic, he started the development of three private medical centres: Cork, Ireland; Lisbon, Portugal; and Glasgow, Scotland. He remains a director of the Blackrock Clinic and Galway Clinic.

Background to John Cleary Developments.

John Cleary Developments (JCD) is a privately owned property development and investment company specialising in the construction of office, retail, medical and light industrial property, primarily in Cork, for the past 20 years.  The low profile firm are one of the biggest business park developers in the south of Ireland, to date completing over 785,000 square feet of quality business park space in Cork, creating successful working environments for over 1500 people.

JCD has recently received planning permission for an additional 280,000 sq ft of high end office accommodation at a site adjoining the existing City Gate which it acquired from Cork City Council in 2009.  When completed it is envisaged that the total City Gate development will provide jobs for over 3,000 people and is specifically designed to cater for large multi-national clients.

The €140m City Gate Development comprising of a total of over 330,000 square feet and has 900 underground car parking spaces making it one of the largest new commercial developments in Ireland.  Located adjoining Mahon Point Shopping Centre, on the South Ring Road Network, the new Cork Medical Centre will be extremely accessible for patients. Designed around a central plaza, incorporating a Cafe and attractive civic space, City Gate has set a new standard for commercial developments in Cork.

As well as having the largest VHI Swiftcare Clinic in Ireland, JCD have now leased over 180,000 square feet of office space at City Gate. Tenants including McAfee, Big Fish Games and Solarwinds, who have chosen City Gate as their European, Middle East and African headquarters in the face of very stiff competition. Other occupiers include HIQA, Pobal and Regus. The scale of these lettings is unprecedented in Ireland particularly given the current market conditions.

An additional 35,000 sq. ft has recently received a change of use planning permission to outpatient medical uses. A large portion of this space is currently under negotiation with internationally renowned medical operators and the intention is to create a world class medical campus.

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[1] A new type of neuro angiography diagnostics machine that can provide high definition 4D real time images.

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