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Barcelona
BARCELONA

Country: Spain

Climate: hot

Currency: euro

What's the cheapest I can live on: say...e25 for hostel,food and drink per day

When you're there you'll miss: John Player Blue

When you come back you'll miss: Everything...paying e2.60 for a 20 pack of smokes,the cheap drink,the way everyone hangs out in the streets at night. The amazing Gaudi architecture everywhere. The cleanliness.

Recommended place to stay: Hotel Call - twin room for e52/night. or any hostel in the barri gotic.

Most important thing to know before going there: That Barcelonians are rude. Don't take offence. And that the foreigners livin on the streets of barcelona make great company.

Best portrayed in film fiction or music: emm....queen, barcelona?

Best memory: Paying e4 each between 8 of us and getting enough drink to last us the whole night,drinking it on the warm beach all night while smoking cheap yet amazing pollen.

The worst memory: Coming back into Dublin airport Other Info: 1 litre of red wine (65 cents) + 2 litres coca cola (e1.30) = 3 litres of CALIMOCHO (e1.95)

Destination Guide by Kate Murphy

 

Win an iPad, iPhone or free Pizza!

The generous people at Apache Pizza are giving away 5 ipads, 10 iPhones and 500 large pizzas. All you have to do is complete a 1 minute survey on... Pizza!

 Linking to http://www.apache.ie/onlinesurvey

Spanner Pics

Enda and Sarko remember the good oul days

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Joke of the Day

John Terry won't be facing trial for racial abuse until after Euro 2012. So he's free to lead his country into Poland. Just like his hero did.
(Manic1)

Spanner TV

Don't feed the Elephants

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Irishman makes "billion-euro home" of shredded notes

(Reuters) - An unemployed Irish artist has built a home from the shredded remains of 1.4 billion euros ($1.82 billion), a monument to the "madness" he says has been wrought on Ireland by the single currency, from a spectacular construction boom to a wrenching bust.

Frank Buckley built the apartment in the lobby of a Dublin office building that has lain vacant since its completion four years ago at the peak of an ill-fated construction boom, using bricks of shredded euro notes he borrowed from Ireland's national mint.

"It's a reflection of the whole madness that gripped us," Buckley said of what he calls his "billion-euro home."

"People were pouring billions into buildings now worth nothing," he said. "I wanted to create something from nothing."

A wave of cheap credit flowed into Ireland in the early 2000s after Ireland joined the currency zone fuelling a huge property bubble that transformed the country.

The bubble's collapse since 2007 plunged Ireland into the deepest recession in the industrialized world, forcing the former "Celtic Tiger" to accept a humiliating bailout from the EU and the IMF.

Buckley was given a 100 percent mortgage at the peak of the boom to buy a 365,000 euro home on the far reaches of Dublin's commuter belt, despite the fact he had no steady income.

He has separated from his wife who lives in the home, which has since lost at least one-third of its value.

Living in his "billion euro home" since the start of December, Buckley is working on adding a kitchen to the living room and hall.

The walls and floor are covered in euro shreddings and the house is so warm Buckley sleeps without a blanket.

Pictures made from notes and coins decorate the walls, including one of a house, made from Irish 5 pence pieces.

"There are houses in Ireland worth less than that," Buckley quips.

Buckley said he wants Europe's politicians to solve the eurozone debt crisis without destroying its currency. But if the currency ultimately fails, he will happily use the euro zone's defunct notes as fodder for future projects.

"Whatever you say about the euro, it's a great insulator."