
August/September VILLAGE
achievements in recent years. Ringsend
Nature Park is a wonderful linear park
between the city and the sea on the site of
a former landfill site. St Catherine’s Park in
Lucan combines old woodlands and play-
ing pitches beside the banks of the River
Liffey, and it must also be one of the few
Irish parks with its own Twitter account.
In Dublin’s North Inner City the City Council
finally landscaped a derelict site on North
King Street that had been in their owner-
ship for a quarter of a century. It now has
been grassed and planted with shrubs and
trees and is a model for ‘temporary use’
parks that make use of lands that face an
uncertain future. A similar approach was
I
T’S Sunday morning in the Phoenix Park.
A group of Brazilians are playing foot-
ball under the shadow of the Wellington
Monument. In the distance a herd of deer
look on. One suspects the Duke of Ormond
would be happy to know that years after
he purchased the lands for a royal deer-park,
deer and residents happily share the space.
Yet all is not well with the state of
our parks. As cities increase in popula-
tion development pressures threaten the
future of green space. A new generation of
city residents living in small apartments
expect more from their parks, and cash-
strapped local authorities find it difficult
to meet changing expectations on shrink-
ing budgets. The Phoenix Park itself is
riven by roadways and has been described
as “remorseless prairie, pitches and link-
roads” with little of the sequestered charm
of New York’s Central Park or London’s
great parks. The Croppies Acre Park in front
of Collins Barracks is currently closed to
the public and was recently transferred
from the Office of Public Works to Dublin
City Council. The ambitious plans for a
park at the Royal Canal beside the National
Conference Centre in Dublin’s Docklands
have not been realised. The Liffey Quays
which could be a linear park from Heuston
Station to Dublin Bay are choked with cars,
with footpaths barely wide enough in parts
for a single pedestrian. Uproar in certain
quarters greeted proposals for traffic calm-
ing there. The park at Ormond Square in the
north inner city has a sign banning football
a few metres away from the plaque marking
the birthplace of footballer Johnny Giles.
Green spaces are often converted to ‘hard’
spaces as local authorities find them easier
to maintain. Eyre Square and Wolfe Tone
park are unfortunate manifestations of the
tendancy.
However, there have been notable
taken with Granby Park, a ‘pop-up’ park on
Dominick Street last summer, though critics
worry about the long-term legacy of tem-
porary interventions. Nearby St Michan’s
park on Green Street on the site of the site
of an old jail provides a meeting place for
Irish and immigrant families with a range
of play facilities. The City Council has com-
mitted to reinstate the grassland integrity
of Mountjoy Square.
At a time when funding is scarce much
can be achieved with some creative think-
ing. Glasnevin Cemetery and the Botanic
Gardens share a common boundary and
recently opened up a gate allowing visitors
to walk between the two, adding civic value
Parks are good for the environment, quality of life and human health: a series of
articles will explore opportunities to expand and develop them imaginatively.
By Ciarán Cuffe
Parklife
Eyre Square,
Galway