Today I brought my Sony A7RIV which I have not used for more than a year, maybe much more more. The camera is a very high resolution device as I was trying to capture the feel of the place rather than absolute detail I decided to use a Zeiss Batis 25mm lens.
If you get a guided tour on St Patrick’s College and the graveyard you may be informed that there are two unusual burials in the cemetery these being the graves of former Maynooth students who died under strange circumstances. In 1841, a student by the name of Sean O’Grady died after falling from his window in a building called Rhetoric House on the Maynooth Campus. Twenty years later, another student by the name of Thomas McGinn was housed in this same room. While in this room, McGinn cut himself with a razor, and jumped out of the same window. Before he died of his injuries it is claimed that he said that demonic occurrences in the room convinced him to end his life. Over the years I have heard many variations of the story but I have not located the graves.
I am not sure if the Jameson Gate and the Prussia Street Gate are the same entity. However I do know that the Prussia Street Gate is an intended gateway onto the Grangegorman site on its western side to provide easier access from the Prussia Street and Stoneybatter areas. It will connect onto St. Brendan’s Way which will be one of the main thoroughfares through the DIT Campus.
It would appear that there were plans for at least three student accommodation complexes along both sides of Prussia Street but I have noticed little progress over the last twelve months. It should be mentioned that a number of North inner city councillors have stated that they are opposed to plans for 162 build-to-rent apartments on Prussia Street, Stoneybatter, which involves a 13 storey tower.
In 2021 An Bord Pleanála has approved the demolition of the Park Shopping Centre to provide for a major residential development including almost 600 student bed spaces as well as a new district shopping centre. Permission was granted to the owners of the shopping centre to develop two large apartment blocks up to eight storeys in height which will provide 578 student bed spaces and 29 build-to-rent apartments as well as a supermarket, two restaurants or cafes plus eleven retail units.
It was expected that there would be a new pedestrian and cycle path connecting Prussia Street with the Technical University Dublin campus at Grangegorman meaning that I could walk from my apartment to the Stoneybatter area in about ten minutes.
Prussia Street is named in the late 18th century after Frederick II, King of Prussia. Prior to this is had been called Cabaragh Lane. Manor Street derives its name from medieval Grangorman Manor. The name Stoneybatter, derived from ‘Bothar na gloch’ (road of stones) dates from at least 1603. The road follows an ancient route from Wicklow to Tara which crossed the Liffey at the ford of the hurdles.
The name Grangegorman is derived from the territory of the Ui Vairrche, whose main families were the Ui Treasaigh and the Ui MacGorman, displaced following the Norman invasion in the 12th century (Tracy 2011). The ‘Grange’ refers to the grange, or homefarm of Holy Trinity (Christ Church) at Grangegorman Manor.
Note: Randelswood have applied to An Bord Pleanála for permission for the development of apartment blocks ranging from 3 to 13 storeys at 23-28 Prussia Street which will include a pedestrian and cycle access to the TU Campus at Grangegorman. Beside this site at 29b, 30 and 31 Prussia Street, another development entity – Viridis Real Estate Services and Prussia Properties – have applied to build 236 student bedspaces in three blocks ranging from 5 to 7 storeys.
Note: Since early this year the Park Shopping Centre development is being offered for sale as an investment and redevelopment opportunity by agent Cushman & Wakefield at a guide price of €11 million.
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