• Skip to main content
  • DUBLINBIKES PHOTO COLLECTIONS

PUBLIC TRANSPORT

All Photographs Supplied By William Murphy

Home » Ireland » Page 6

Ireland

CLONTARF TRAIN STATION

July 22, 2023 by infomatique

PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016


I have only visited this station once or twice and 2016 could well have been my last visit.
The original photographs suffered from motion blur and camera shake but was able to correct the problem using ON1 Photo RAW.

Clontarf Road railway station is a railway station in Dublin, Ireland, on the DART commuter rail line. It is located in the suburb of Clontarf, close to the seafront. The station was opened on 29 September 1844 and is currently operated by Irish Rail.

Clontarf Road station has two platforms, one serving southbound trains and the other serving northbound trains. The station has a ticket office, a waiting room, and a car park. There is also a pedestrian footbridge connecting the two platforms.

The station is served by the DART commuter rail line, which runs from Howth to Bray. The DART operates every 10-15 minutes during peak times and every 20-30 minutes off-peak.


  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 012
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 011
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 010
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 009
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 008
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 007
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 006
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 005
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 004
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 003
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 002
  • CLONTARF TRAIN STATION [ PHOTOGRAPHED 15 SEPTEMBER 2016] 001

Filed Under: Clontarf Station, DART, Railway Station, Train Station Tagged With: A7RII, Clontarf Train Station, DART Service, Dublin, Dublin Area Rapid Transit, Fotonique, Infomatique, Ireland, ON1 Photo RAW 2023, Railway Station, September 2016, Sony, 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.


  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 07 [HIGH STREET DUBLIN] 005
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 07 [HIGH STREET DUBLIN] 001
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 07 [HIGH STREET DUBLIN] 004
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 07 [HIGH STREET DUBLIN] 003
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 07 [HIGH STREET DUBLIN] 002

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

BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION

May 29, 2023 by infomatique

I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO


Today I got the DART [Dublin Area Rapid Transit] to Booterstown and I then walked to Blackrock. The trains were packed and there were many visitors from the UK because it is a major holiday in the UK. I had intended to get a train from Blackrock to Dun Laoghaire but changed my mind as the last of my four batteries was at 20% [this is one of the major problems with the Sigma DP3 Quattro].

The area is home to Booterstown marsh, a bird sanctuary which has been leased for many years by An Taisce, who have worked to protect it. Species seen regularly include mallard, Eurasian teal, common moorhen, water rail, grey heron, little egret, common redshank, greenshank, Eurasian curlew, common snipe, Eurasian oystercatcher, bar-tailed godwit, common kingfisher, sedge warbler and dunlin.

The Catholic Church of the Assumption is a focal point of the area along Booterstown Avenue.

Booterstown has a dedicated Circus Field located along the Rock Road, where both Tom Duffy’s Circus (June/July) and Fossett’s Circus (October) are set up once a year.

The Old Punch Bowl pub, which stands at the bottom of Booterstown Avenue, was established in 1779.

Merrion Cemetery is an old cemetery that was used from the 13th century to 1866 and is located at Bellevue between Booterstown and Merrion off the Rock Road.

Booterstown was recorded in 1488 as one of the locations for the boundary of The Pale … “He’s out there … totally beyond the Pale of any acceptable human conduct.” That’s how the U.S. Army describes Marlon Brando’s rogue colonel, Kurtz, in the movie Apocalypse Now.


  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 001
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 002
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 003
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 004
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 005
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 006
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 007
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 008
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 009
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 010
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 011
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 012
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 013
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 014
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 015
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 016
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 017
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 018
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 019
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 020
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 021
  • BOOTERSTOWN MARSH AND TRAIN STATION [I USED A SIGMA DP3 QUATTRO] 022

Filed Under: Booterstown Station, Public Transport, Railway Station Tagged With: bar-tailed godwit, Beach, bird sanctuary, Booterstown, common kingfisher, common moorhen, common redshank, common snipe, DART, DP3, dunlin, Eurasian curlew, Eurasian oystercatcher, Eurasian teal, Fotonique, greenshank, grey heron, Infomatique, Ireland, little egret, mallard, Marsh, Quattro, Railway, Railway Station, sedge warbler, Sigma, The Pale, Train Station, water rail, William Murphy

DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 40

May 6, 2023 by infomatique

AT WOLFE TONE PARK 5 MAY 2023


VISIT WOLFE TONE PARK

The feel of the area has greatly improved as a result of the greening of Wolfe Tone Park. This is now a well located and maintained docking station … of course all are well maintained but some locations are better than others.

  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 40 001
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 40 002
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 40 003
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 40 004
  • DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 40 005

Filed Under: Bicycle Rental, Bike Hire, Docking Station 40, Jervis Street, Wolfe Tone Park Tagged With: Docking Station 40, DublinBikes, Fotonique, FX30, Green Space, Infomatique, Ireland, Jervis Street, Public Space, Public Transport, Sony, Street Photography, William Murphy, Wolfe Tone Park, Wolfe Tone Square

NOW NOW NOW NOW

May 6, 2023 by infomatique

DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 77 WOLFE TONE STREET


The robust bicycles are produced by the French bicycle company Mercier in Hungary and are repaired by JCDecaux. They are three-speed bicycles, fitted with Shimano Nexus gears which can be changed up and down using a twist/grip shifter on the right handlebar. A Shimano hub dynamo in the front wheel generates power for front and rear always-on LED lighting. The bikes are fitted with Schwalbe Marathon tyres. Other components include a locking system, an adjustable cushioned saddle, a front bicycle basket, a kick stand and a bell.

Each station is equipped with an automatic rental terminal and stands for 20 to 40 bicycles. Initially, fourteen terminals have credit card facilities enabling the user to purchase a 3-Day Ticket.

If a user arrives with a rented bicycle at a station without open spots, the terminal grants another fifteen minutes of free rental time. The rental terminals also display information about neighbouring dublinbike stations, including location, number of available bicycles and open stands. A fleet of bicycle-transporting vehicles are used to redistribute bicycles between empty and full stations.

DUBLINBIKES DOCKING STATION 77 WOLFE TONE STREET 001

Filed Under: Docking Station, Docking Station 77, DublinBikes, Wolfe Tone Street Tagged With: Docking Station 77, Dublin, DublinBikes, Fotonique, French bicycle company Mercier, FX30, Infomatique, Ireland, JCDecaux, Public Transport, Schwalbe Marathon tyres, Shimano Nexus gears, Sony, Streets Of Dublin, three-speed bicycles, William Murphy, Wolfe Tone Street

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to page 5
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • Go to Next Page »

You will find links to buy products from Amazon, Google and other partners. If you click on these links, you’ll find that the URL includes a small extra piece of text which identifies that the click came from my websites. This text is an affiliate code, and it means that I get a small percentage of the money you spend if you choose to buy that product, or, in some cases, other products from the site soon after. These affiliate links help pay the costs of producing my websites and ensure that the content is free to you.