Festival of Ideas

12th to 15th of June 2025, Drogheda

In association with Development Perspectives

The Festival of Ideas is a dynamic, interdisciplinary celebration that explores the powerful themes of dereliction, vacancy, and revitalisation. Rooted in architecture, urban planning, art, and social change, the festival invites communities, creatives, thinkers, and activists to reimagine the spaces we overlook — abandoned buildings, forgotten corners, and dormant infrastructures — as sites of potential and transformation.

Through thought-provoking talks, interactive installations, guided urban walks and collaborative workshops, the festival delves into the layered histories of neglected spaces and investigates their roles in shaping identity, memory, and possibility.

From grassroots regeneration projects to radical visions for future cities, the Festival of Ideas challenges us to see Drogheda differently.

Held at the intersection of creativity and civic engagement, this festival serves as both a platform and a provocation: how might we breathe new life into what’s been left behind?


Events:

Friday the 13th of June:

Revitalising Drogheda: Lessons from Cork and Donegal

The Barbican, St. Peter’s Parish Centre – 7.30pm

Join Drogheda Vacancy and Dereliction for a conversation with Jude Sherry and Donnan Harvey as they share their experiences tackling vacancy and dereliction in Cork and Donegal.

Speakers:

Judy Sherry is a transdisciplinary designer, artist, and activist challenging cultural norms and unsustainable systems through policy, practice, and protest. She is co-founder and director of the global design agency anois, and co-instigator of the grassroots movement #DerelictIreland. An international expert in sustainable design, ecodesign, and the circular economy, Judy has worked across sectors from furniture to bioplastics. Her passion for sustainability drives her work in product development, operations, and innovation. She holds a Bachelor’s in Industrial Design and a Master’s in Environmental Management.

Donnan Harvey is a dedicated community activist and the project manager of the Letterkenny Cathedral Quarter initiative in County Donegal, Ireland. Growing up in Letterkenny, Harvey developed a deep appreciation for the area’s historical significance. This connection inspired him to spearhead efforts to revitalize the Church Lane and its surroundings, aiming to establish a vibrant cultural and historical quarter in the heart of the town.

The event is free, please register HERE


Saturday the 14th of June:

Past Future Re-use

Saturday morning | 98-99 West Street, Drogheda

An exhibition of the work of MArch students from the School of Architecture, Planning and Environmental Policy in University College Dublin.
Responding to a need for a greater degree of reuse in the built environment, this Design Research
Studio asks how architecture can engage equally with past and future.
The studio examines the ways in which the past manifests itself on site – through material, culture
and built form, but also through memory, narrative and history and considers how these pasts can
serve to prompt and support future strategies.
In this academic year the studio has based its work in the town of Drogheda.


Saturday the 14th of June:

Past Future Re-use

Saturday morning | 98-99 West Street, Drogheda

An exhibition of the work of MArch students from the School of Architecture, Planning and Environmental Policy in University College Dublin.
Responding to a need for a greater degree of reuse in the built environment, this Design Research
Studio asks how architecture can engage equally with past and future.
The studio examines the ways in which the past manifests itself on site – through material, culture
and built form, but also through memory, narrative and history and considers how these pasts can
serve to prompt and support future strategies.
In this academic year the studio has based its work in the town of Drogheda.

Speculative Futures Workshop

The Barbican | 1.30pm


Join us at The Barbican, St. Peter’s Parish Centre for a day of creative exploration and imagination. The Alliance of Spatial Liberation invites you to reimagine derelict spaces as sites of possibility. Through collaborative mapping, speculative futures, and tactical (or guerrilla) urbanism approaches, participants will develop bold yet practical visions for abandoned properties while building connections that could drive real change. No specialised knowledge required— just bring your curiosity and local insights.

Register for Speculative Futures Workshop HERE

Facilitators: Heather Griffin (she/her) and Patrick Mulvihill (he/him) collaborate at the intersection of art, design and futures to bring communities together and create new narratives for our transitional times. Within this space they present alternative visions of the world through speculative futures, worldbuilding, creative placemaking, and experiential learning. Their work is connected with long horizons of time, providing space for considered debate, through multi-layered experimentation, prototyping and transdisciplinary collaboration. They mix media, engage communities, conduct deep research and embrace complex systems to build powerful collaborative networks and narratives that will help shape more equitable and regenerative futures. Their current work includes the ongoing development of the Amicitia social enterprise in Athenry, place-based Dinnseanchas residency in North Kerry and supporting the community of Buncrana to develop an eco-strategy for their town.

Whose Town is it Anyway? – The Regeneration Session

Mc Hugh’s, 1-3 Cord Road, Drogheda | 8pm

Join us for a night of banter and awards.


Sunday the 15th of June:

Walk+Talk – Pretty Vacant Reprise

The Buttergate – On the Green | 2.30pm – 5pm

Join us on a guided tour of vacancy and dereliction in Drogheda whilst hearing from a range of contributors and experts.

Register for Walk and Talk HERE


This project was made possible with funding from the Arts Council of Ireland