Ireland's first railway, the
Dublin and Kingstown, was built to (later known as
standard gauge). The
Ulster Railway (UR), taking the Irish Railway Commission's advice, used . The
Dublin and Drogheda Railway was proposed to be built to gauge on the grounds of lower costs. The two broader gauges were not used anywhere else. Following complaints from the UR, the
Board of Trade investigated the matter, and in 1843 decreed the use of . This gauge was given legal status by the
Regulating the Gauge of Railways Act 1846, which specified for Great Britain, 5ft 3in for Ireland. The UR was
re-gauged in 1846, at a cost of £19,000 (about £ today), and the Dublin and Kingstown Railway in 1857 for £38,000 (about £ today). The
Hill of Howth Tramway and the
Dublin and Blessington Steam Tramway also adopted the gauge. Dublin's
Luas tram system, opened in 2004, uses . == Narrow gauge ==