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23 Oct 2025

Coolmore plans to demolish farm buildings on a Tipperary farm are stalled

Save Parkville Farm Group

 An environmental group founded in Tipperary stage protest at Coolmore acquired farm

Members of the Save Parkville Farm Group protesting at the now Coolmore owned Parkville Farm

Plans to demolish JP Magnier owned derelict farm buildings at Parkville near Clonmel have been put on hold.

The plans have stalled after  Dr Alan Moore of the Save Parkville Farm Group lodged an appeal with An Bord Pleanála against the Tipperary County Council's decision to grant planning permission.

The appeal was lodged on 12 May and a decision is due on or before 15 September.

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JP Magnier is the son of well-known stud owner John Magnier, and in March 2024, the Magniers’ Coolmore is reported to have paid €2.425 million, or almost €38,000 an acre for the 64-acre farm at Parkville.

Tipperary County  Council granted planning permission to the Coolmore-linked Melclon UC for the demolition of existing derelict buildings at Parkville together with all associated site development works despite local opposition which included a farm-gate demonstration on October 3rd last at the site.

In the appeal, Dr Alan Moore argued that the permission conflicts in its entirety with the aims and recommendations of Tipperary County Council plan policy in relation to vernacular farm buildings.

In his original objection, Dr Moore stated that "We have lost far too many similar structures both in Tipperary and nationally. There is no excuse for making the same mistake again."

The Moore appeal includes a personal letter that under-bidder to the Parkville property, John Hurley, sent to the Magnier family last October.

Mr Hurley was runner up to Coolmore in the bidding for the property at auction last year and in his letter, Mr Hurley said that himself and his late father had been stewards to Parkville for nearly 50 years where they rented the property.

Mr Hurley says: “Parkville was more than just a farm to us: it was a legacy, a responsibility and a testament to the enduring bond between man and land. We poured our hearts and souls into it, ensuring its beauty and history remained intact.

Melclon lodged its plans on September 18th last, and in his letter dated October 8th, Mr Hurley said that “this letter is written with a heavy heart with both sorrow and a deep sense of injustice”.

Mr Hurley said to the Magnier family that it is crucial to address the recent peaceful protest that took place outside the gates of Parkville.

Mr Hurley followed up his letter to the Magnier family with a formal objection to the planning application.

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A notice placed on the gate at the site by the applicants stated that “these lands contain a derelict yard of rubble stone construction. After decades of serious neglect, it is heavily overgrown and crumbling and is now a serious health and safety concern”.

The notice states that “the owner has applied for demolition on health and safety grounds."

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