Monthly Archives: November 2025

Research Week 2025 at Maynooth University

The Data Stories team was involved in two events during the Maynooth University Research Week.  

Maynooth Sparks 2025: Celebrating Early Career Research  

This year’s Research Week featured Maynooth Sparks 2025, an inspiring event bringing together the university’s early career research community on Tuesday 21st October.   

Behind the scenes, Maynooth postdoc liaison Juliette Davret worked closely with the event organisers, especially Noreen Lacey (from the Research Development Office – RDO), to coordinate the event. Juliette helped shape the panel discussion, bringing in Rob Kitchin to share his perspective on ERC funding and supervising a research team.

The morning began with a series of 6-minute talks in which postdocs showcased diverse research, from energy justice and cosmology simulations to language models and healthcare innovation.  

The following panel discussion on “Funding opportunities & building research teams” was facilitated by Patrick Boyle (RDO) and featured expert insights from the following speakers:

  • Eilish Lynch on career pathways
  • Dr Abeer Eshra and Dr Niamh Wycherley on Research Ireland Pathway Experiences  
  • Dr Guilia Gaggioni on Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellowships  
  • Prof Rob Kitchin on ERC funding and the supervisor’s perspective

The talks emphasised the importance of tailoring grant application to align with what the specific funder values, clearly articulating the intellectual contribution, feasibility and broader impact of the idea. A strong proposal not only presets a solid concept but also communicates its significance and potential payoff in accessible, compelling terms.  

The event concluded with a networking lunch, allowing researchers to connect with colleagues and RDO staff – the perfect end to a morning of knowledge sharing and community building!  

Daft.ie for Noobs: Gaming Ireland’s property market by spoofing property websites 

On the Thursday of Research Week, members of the Data Stories team hosted a 1-hour interactive workshop titled Daft.ie for Noobs: Gaming Ireland’s Property Market by Spoofing Property Websites. The talk was informed by the work of Oliver Dawkins, Ella Harris, Carla Maria Kayanan and Hannah Mumby who are working on a research project called ‘Commodity Narratives’. The event offered a behind-the-scenes look at how this team of creatives and researchers have been collaborating to interrogate the following themes in relation to the housing crisis in Ireland: a) the commodification of housing, b) the role of capitalism in shaping housing desires (and futures), and c) the use of digital games as a medium testing assumptions and gaining better understanding of peoples lived experiences.  

Prior to the workshop, the team sent a survey to participants inquiring into their personal housing journeys. Answers provided insight into frustrations that people deal with when navigating housing in Ireland. These insights also serve to inform the iterative process of website and game development and help to ensure that the work we produce is meaningful and relevant to an Irish audience. 

Example question: What (if anything) feels absurd about navigating housing in Ireland?  

The aim of the workshop was twofold. We wanted to introduce the work to the Maynooth University community, but we also hoped to test our work in progress to receive feedback. Starting with a short presentation, the team described how creative experiments — from data scraping to gamified website prototypes — seek to expose the absurdities embedded the property market and the logics that underpin it. Following the introduction, Olly showcased early technical experiments underpinning the spoof property site which is modelled on familiar sites like Daft.ie and MyHome.ie.

Participants were then invited to interact with our website, which was embedded with games and various hidden Easter eggs to find which satirise different aspects of Ireland’s property market. Links to pages which dump you on the Craigslist for shared rooms are just one example, mirroring the bitter experience of many student renters who are unable to secure more private accommodation. 

The work is still in progress; including the research informing the webpage, design coherence and mechanics. We hope to deliver a website that sufficiently mirrors popular property websites in Ireland but that the user journey is slightly off, surprising and ultimately jarring so as to provoke reflection on the commodification of housing.

Of course, we also want site visitors to enjoy the satire and have fun! 

To learn more about the early stages of the Commodity Narratives case study and the iterative creative process, visit the Data Stories website previous post: How do commodity narratives influence housing desires and life journeys?

 

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Bringing together urban planning and data: the City Edge case study and workshop

On 17th October 2025, Juliette Davret, Helen Shaw and Carla Maria Kayanan hosted a workshop in Dublin entitled Collaborative Urban Planning with Data, organised as part of the Data Stories project (phase 2). Helen Shaw (artist in residence within Data Stories project for 2025) led the workshop, with Eimear McNally (graphic visual reporter) supporting her. 

The purpose of the case study was to investigate how data informed the City Edge strategic framework and implementation. Following a site visit, 16 stakeholder interviews, desk-based research and an analysis of 37 datasets, the City Edge case study team invited past and present stakeholders involved in the design and implementation of City Edge to a workshop where we could share findings, explore how data shapes urban planning and discuss how we can work better together to plan our cities.

What is City Edge?  

City Edge is a strategic planning project for an area between Dublin City Council and South Dublin City Council. Like many urban planning projects, it involves multiple stakeholders: local authorities, consultants and state agencies. Our research team has been studying how data is collected, shared and use throughout this planning process. 

The video below, which was used by Helen to open the workshop, provides an overview of the challenges and opportunities of the site. 

Findings from our research (to date)  

The research revealed four critical challenges around data governance and the use of data for urban planning in Ireland:  

  1. Data standardisation: Stakeholders use different formats to collect information. This challenges data sharing and creates delays in the planning process. Without a common approach to data governance, it is difficult to plan an integrated urban project.
  2. Data reliability:  Many stakeholders told the researchers that they struggle to access accurate, up-to-date information. Some datasets disappear entirely, while others are difficult to obtain (e.g. additional fee charge). These situations can also hinder the successful roll out of a project, whether it is in the beginning during the fact-finding stage or nearer to the implementation stage.
  3. Data gaps: Key datasets are often incomplete or outdated. Information about tree canopy coverage, habitat mapping, hedgerow data and landscape character assessments is missing or poorly maintained. This finding complements another Data Stories case study (with the CSO), which recently lead to a publication on the property and planning data ecosystem in Ireland. This inconsistency in data reveals that environmental and social values, like biodiversity loss or community well-being, are hard to measure and and/or to integrate into planning models.
  4. Data culture: The researchers discovered limited data literacy across public bodies. This highlights the need to invest not only in data systems but also in the people who understand and manage them.

Additionally, the relationship between local authorities and consultants reveals how consultants currently work with data and raises important questions about the relationship between consultants and local authorities and how these relationships can become more collaborative and innovative. While consultants bring valuable expertise in analysis and scenario development, there is value in ensuring some of these exist and are maintained within local planning departments.  

The workshop: Mapping, Designing and Planning  

Helen started the workshop by welcoming all participants and asking individuals to introduce themselves. This was followed by drone footage of the City Edge planning area. Juliette presented a brief overview of research findings, keeping the presentation tightly focused on data culture and governance. Then, Helen facilitated the main workshop activity through the use of a systems analysis tool called Value Network Mapping and the Berkana Two Loops model – a framework for understanding systems in transition – to encourage the discussion.

Participants identified key roles, relationships and challenges in the planning process. Together, they explored what barriers and opportunities exist and envisioned new ways of working together. Throughout the morning, participants shared their experiences and feedback on both the research findings and the collaborative process.  

Eimear McNally, a graphic visual reporter, captured the discussions in real-time, creating a visual record of our conversations.

What happens next?  

The workshop was just the beginning of forthcoming outputs. From a creative perspective, Helen is in the process of conducting one-on-one audio conversations with participants to create a public story about the case study, similar to her previous work on This Is Where We Live. From an academic perspective, the research remains ongoing. We hope to publish further results in the next few months. 

The Data Stories team would like to thank all participants who joined us for this collaborative session.

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