Trinity College Dublin, Birr Scientific and Heritage Foundation, and Offaly County Council have opened the I-LOFAR Education Centre and launched the Astronomical Midlands Schools and Public Engagement Programme. Professor Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell was a special guest.

Connect with students, teachers and the public in the midlands


Astronomical Midlands (AstroLands), which has been funded by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI), will use the recently refurbished I-LOFAR Education Centre at Birr Castle to connect with students, teachers and members of the public in rural communities in the midlands. The refurbishment of the Education Centre has been supported by the Department of Culture, Heritage & the Gaeltacht and Offaly County Council. Head of I-LOFAR, Professor Peter Gallagher, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, said: “AstroLands will open new conversations with groups that have had little involvement with STEM using this unique new facility at Birr. "This is a wonderful opportunity to carry forward the rich scientific heritage of Birr, allowing people in the midlands to discover opportunities for further education and careers in STEM and inspire the next generation of scientific explorers.” Funded by SFI’s Discover Funding Programme and the European Space Education Resource Office (ESERO), AstroLands will embark on three key initiatives: 1.) Space4Exploration: Create an engaging, inspirational and multi-use space in the I-LOFAR Education Centre. 2.) Space4Students: Launch day-long and week-long space camps at the Education Centre that run during school term and school holidays for students aged 10 to 14. 3.) Space4Teachers: Create CPD workshops for upper primary and lower secondary school teachers based around the National Junior Certificate themes of Earth and Space. The I-LOFAR Consortium is proud to continue the rich heritage in astronomy at Birr Castle, taking Irish astrophysics from its pioneering days in the 18th century to the current state-of-the-art in the 21st century. The I-LOFAR Education Centre will complement the existing Science Visitor Centre at Birr Castle, which tells the story of past Irish achievements in science. It will provide an inspirational location for education workshops, and community-based STEM projects, such as CoderDojo. It will be equipped with a 3D video globe, a large video wall, numerous interactive flat screen displays, and a LOFAR radio telescope network activity wall. The I-LOFAR Education Centre is being developed in partnership with Offaly County Council and has been supported by a grant from Department of Arts, Heritage, Regional, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs’s Rural Economic Development Zones (REDZ).