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DOCKING STATION 73 ON FRANCIS STREET

August 10, 2023 by infomatique

THE STREET HAS BEEN RECONFIGURED TO BE PEDESTRIAN FRIENDLY


DublinBikes station 73 is located at the Iveagh Markets building on Francis Street in Dublin, Ireland. It is one of the 124 docking stations in the DublinBikes public bicycle scheme.

An urban regeneration plan was approved as long ago as 2017 but work was delayed until sometime in 2021 and was painfully slow much to the annoyance of with a business on the street but the end result is impressive.

With a strong emphasis on pedestrians, the plan included the widening of pavements and new threshold spaces to the front of the Iveagh Market and St Nicholas de Myra Church. The somewhat awkward widening and narrowing of the carriageway gave way to a consistent width and measures to reduce speeds and allow for more relaxed cycling and easier crossing. There were major changes to car parking and loading arrangements. 20 new street trees and landscaped areas, sustainable urban drainage measures (SUDs), new street lighting, street furniture and utilities all serve to create a much improved street and should establish Francis Street as a major destination.


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Filed Under: Docking Station 73, Francis Street Tagged With: 12 pro Max, Apple, Bicycle Rental, Bike Hire, Docking Station 73, Dublin, DublinBikes, Francis Street, Infomatique, Ireland, Public Transport, William Murphy

DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 07

June 4, 2023 by infomatique

HIGH STREET DUBLIN


DublinBikes, also known as NOW DublinBikes, is a self-service bike rental system open to everyone from fourteen years of age.

Stations are distributed throughout the city centre to enable easy access and optimal use for subscribers. Each station has a minimum of fifteen stands, making it easy to avail of this service.

The service is accessible twelve months a year, seven days a week between the hours of 5am and 12.30am.

High Street is a street in the medieval area of Dublin. The Street runs parallel to the River Liffey, on high ground about 200 metres to its south, with Christ Church Cathedral on its east side, in the heart of Medieval Dublin.

High Street was at the centre of Viking Dublin and Medieval Dublin (9th–13th centuries); Christ Church Cathedral is located immediately on its northeast end. It is south of the Viking settlement site at Wood Quay and east of Dublin Castle; it was the main street in the medieval period. Patrick FitzLeones, who was three times Mayor of Dublin in the late fifteenth century, bought a house on High Street in 1473.

St. Michael’s Church was first built in 1076 and St. Audoen’s Church was built on the north side of High Street in 1190. A marble cistern to contain the municipal water supply was built there in 1308. It was commonly called Le Decer’s Fountain, in memory of John Le Decer, four times Mayor of Dublin, who paid for the construction of the cistern.

The first General Post Office of Ireland opened on High Street in 1688; it moved to Fishamble Street in 1689.

From the 18th century onward the urban core shifted eastwards, and High Street is no longer a shopping street. St Audoen’s Church (Catholic) was built in the 1840s next to the ancient Protestant church.

An excavation took place in 1962–63; found were several Viking pieces of artwork: bone trial-pieces and a gilt bronze disc-brooch of the Borre Style design, a bronze needle case, and a soapstone ingot-mould. The trades practised in the Viking period (10th–11th century) included comb making, leather working and weaving.

The street was excavated again in 1968–71; finds included post and wattle houses, leather shoes and boots, bone objects, metalwork, pottery, coins, animal bones, a Rome pilgrim badge from the early 13th century, a lead seal of Pope Innocent III, a spoon bit, and wood-turning waste.

In the 1970s many of the street’s commercial buildings were demolished so that it could be widened to a dual carriageway. For a period of time following the road widening, the street was mostly derelict and vacant sites. In 1993, Christ Church’s synod hall was converted to Dublinia, a tourist attraction educating people about Viking Dublin.


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Filed Under: Docking Station 07, DublinBikes, High Street Tagged With: 5D MkIII, 9th–13th centuries, Bike Hire, Canon, commercial buildings were demolished, docking station 07, DublinBikes, Fotonique, High Street, Infomatique, Ireland, medieval area, Public Transport, Streets Of Dublin, viking area, william m urphy

DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 29 ON ORMOND QUAY

April 22, 2023 by infomatique

I USED AN OLD SIGMA DP3 MERRILL


Ormond Quay was the first of the quays to be built on the north bank side of the River Liffey, complete by c. 1680, developed by Sir Humphrey Jervis and named in honour of the Duke of Ormond who instigated the trend for building houses facing the river.

Early in 2013 I purchased a Sigma Dp3 Merrill and while it could produce the best images ever it was in reality a disaster. The batteries could at times last only long enough to capture 40 images [at best no more than 80] and one could forget about selecting any setting other ISO 100. In order to process RAW images one needed to use Sigma’s Photo Pro 5.5 which was supplied with the camera.

Recently I discovered that Photo Pro 6.8.3 was much more user friendly than the version supplied with the camera so I decided to charge all eight batteries, that I still had, and use the camera for a day (22 April 2021) but unfortunately the weather proved to be way too wet. Two of the batteries were exhausted after ten captures.

The DP3 Merrill was the latest of a trio of almost identical compact cameras released by Sigma, all named for Dick Merrill (1949-2008), the co-developer of the Foveon image capture system. The DP1 Merrill and DP2 Merrill were announced in early February 2012. The former features a 19mm f/2.8 lens that provides the equivalent of a 28mm field of view in 35mm format, while the DP2 Merrill has a 30mm f/2.8 lens with a field of view equivalent to 45mm. Unveiled on 8 January, 2013, the DP3 Merrill sports a 50mm f/2.8 lens with a 75mm equivalent focal length that is ideal for portraiture.

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Filed Under: Capel Street, Docking Station 29, DublinBikes, Ormond Quay, Public Transport, Sigma Camera, Sigma DP3 Merrill Tagged With: Bicycle Rental, Bike Hire, building houses facing the river, Docking Station 29, DublinBikes, Duke of Ormond, first of the quays, Fotonique, Infomatique, north bank side of the River Liffey, Ormond Quay, Public Transport, Sigma Camera, Sigma DP3, Sigma Merrill, Streets Of Dublin, William Murphy

DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 64 – SANDWICH STREET ON A WET DAY

March 29, 2023 by infomatique

MARCH 2023 USING AN iPHONE 12 PRO MAX


If you use this docking station it might interest you to learn that at the corners of Sandwith Street and Fenian Street there replica of the former Archer’s Garage, designed by Arnold Francis Hendy and completed in 1946.

On the June bank holiday weekend, 1999, the art deco, grade 1 listed garage on Fenian Street was illegally demolished by contractors working for the O’Callaghan hotel group. A public outcry followed, and while developer Noel O’Callaghan claimed this was the reason why he reconstructed the Garage, he was in fact ordered by Dublin City Council on threat of a €1,000,000 fine and/or imprisonment. The reconstruction is far from accurate to the original and I was more than a little disappointed having lived close to the original for about seven years.

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Filed Under: Bicycle Rental, Bike Hire, Docking Station 64, DublinBikes, Public Transport, Sandwich Street Tagged With: Bicycle Rental, Bike Hire, Docking Station 64, DublinBikes, Fotonique, Infomatique, Public Transport, Sandwich Street, William Murphy

DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 20 AT JAMES STREET EAST

March 23, 2023 by infomatique

PHOTOGRAPHED 18 MARCH 2023


This is not where I would have expected East James Street to be located. Anyway, the docking station is beside Miesian Plaza on Baggot Street.

In 2015 Dublin City Council granted permission, at the end of January, to ESB Commercial Properties Ltd for plans that included demolition of all 20th-century buildings on the block, the renovation and reuse of nine Georgian houses, and change of use of part of another.

The three-acre site comprises a city block, bounded by Lower Fitzwilliam Street, Upper Mount Street, James’s Street East and Lower Baggot Street, and includes ESB’s headquarters. To the best of my knowledge the original houses on James Street East were demolished in the 1950s.

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Filed Under: Bicycle Rental, Bike Hire, Docking Station, DublinBikes, James Street East Tagged With: 12 pro Max, Apple, Baggot Street, Bicycle Rental, Bike Hire, DublinBikes, East James Street, ESB, Fotonique, Infomatique, iPhone, James Street East, James’s Street East, Lower Baggot Street, Lower Fitzwilliam Street, Miesian Plaza, Public Transport, Streets Of Dublin, Upper Mount Street, William Murphy

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