Wonderful Night Views On Smithfield Chimney
Don’t miss Smithfield Chimney.
Smithfield is famous for the horse market in Dublin. Also, Jameson Distillery Bow St. is nearby!
Take a look of the place and go up 200 stairs (it’s worthy ! ) to enjoy wonderful Dublin city view on the lookout!
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Music Pancakes by Jef
207m Chimney Climb | Dublin, Ireland
*Climbing the famous Poolbeg Chimneys* I was on a trip to Ireland and I went to Dublin. I wanted to visit this amazing place and climb the famous chimneys in Dublin. I went out to the old and abandoned place one day, climbed over fences, jumped over walls and explored this awesome place. The scenery was amazing and I will never forget it. It took me a while to get up the 200meter chimney and I was concerned about getting busted because I did it an afternoon. I could easily be seen whilst I was climbing. The chimneys are not in use, but there is another part of the area which is. So there were security guards out there. I performed the climb without the use of safety equipment of any kind. - Oliver
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Locations - 85 Smithfield Village, Smithfield, Dublin 7
Brand new kitchen and Bathroom.
Wooden Floors throughout. All new furniture and kitchen appliances. Integrated Fridge Freezer 70/30.
Balcony overlooking the iconic Jameson Distillery Chimney Stack
Check out this Smithfield living guide -
85 Smithfield Village, Smithfield, Dublin 8 - Locations Estate Agency
PROPERTY VIDEO PRODUCTIONS - THE PROPERTY SCENE
Estate Agent referenced in this video :
Locations, 8 Reuben House, Reuben Street, Dublin 8
Tel: (01) 677 1188
Email: info@locations.ie
For all further information please refer to the below:
EXCELLENT CORPORATE STANDARD - QUALITY LET.
**REFURBISHED TO THE HIGHEST STANDARD **** Brand new kitchen and Bathroom . **** Wooden Floors throughout. All new furniture and kitchen appliances. Integrated Fridge Freezer 70/30. *Balcony overlooking the iconic JAMESON Distillery Chimney Stack* Please email to be advised of viewing time.
2 Nights in DUBLIN | Solo Traveler in Ireland
A few weeks back I stayed in Dublin for 2 nights - this is what I got up to as a solo female traveler in Ireland!
2 Nights in DUBLIN | Solo Traveler in Ireland
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Hostel I stayed in:
Climbing the Croke Park stadium:
Irish Film Institute:
Smithfield Chimney/ Generator Skyview Tower - doesn't have a website, but if you go to the reception of the Generator Hostel in Dublin, you can pay the admission fee there (5 euro), they unlock the door and you get to take yourself up to the top. It's 244 steps to the top, with no seats, but there are small landings where you can stop and rest.
To get to Ireland I booked through Megabus: - Carmarthen to Rosslare. The booking price includes a foot passenger ticket onto the ferry. I Used my Tesco Club Card points to pay for my tickets so only ended up paying £1.63. To get to Dublin, you can either catch a bus from the ferry terminal, or catch the train, again from the ferry terminal. I chose to go by train because even though it took an hour longer the train goes up the East Irish coast and has such wonderful views. Far nicer than views of the motorway/ highway. It cost me less than 20 euro return:
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Dublin by drone | Irlanda
The Swastika Laundry Dublin
The Swastika Laundry Dublin
The Swastika Laundry was an Irish business founded in 1912, located on Shelbourne Road, Ballsbridge, a district of Dublin. Its name and logo caused consternation.
The laundry was founded by John W. Brittain (1872–1937) from Manorhamilton, County Leitrim, who was one of the pioneers of the laundry business in Ireland, having founded the Metropolitan and White Heather Laundries in 1899. He was also the owner of a famous horse called Swastika Rose which was well known to frequenters of the Royal Dublin's Society's Shows. The use of the Swastika name was as an ancient Indian symbol of good luck: its name originates from the Sanskrit svastika.
The company used electric vans, painted in red with a white swastika on a black roundel, to collect and deliver laundry to customers. The vans were quite ahead of their time.
In 1939, the laundry changed its name to The Swastika Laundry (1912) to make clear the distinction between its use of the name and symbol and the more recent adoption of the symbol by the Nazi Party in Germany.
It ceased to exist as a separate company until the late 1960s, when it was bought out by the Spring Grove Laundry company, which continued to operate from the same site in Ballsbridge. Nevertheless, the logo and name continued in use until the premises closed in 1987.
Even following the closure of the laundry, its brick chimney, emblazoned with a large white swastika, remained visible for some years from many places in the surrounding area, including the Merrion Road, a main road south from Dublin.
Spring Grove sold the property for redevelopment in the early 21st century during the Dublin property boom of the 1990s and 2000s, as Ballsbridge was by then a popular and exclusive area of Dublin 4. An office development called The Oval was constructed on the site. The chimney, which is a protected structure, survives, but the painted swastika does not. The chimney is surrounded by the oval of the new development.
Old Jameson Distillery Tour - Bow Street, Dublin, Ireland
This is a video compilation of us going through the Old Jameson Distillery on Bow Street in Dublin, Ireland! It includes videos of the tour itself, and then at the end us trying the Jameson & Ginger they give you! Enjoy!
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Streets of Dublin
Footage shot by me and my class mates from NMTC in Dublin
The Colour Space - a film about the Art Tunnel Smithfield, Dublin
a film about the Art Tunnel Smithfield, Dublin
Dublin, 1960's. Guinness and Whiskey. Archive film 92821
Ireland. Series of images of cities on the east coast. Dublin, view of city skyline, cathedral and roof tops, smoking chimneys, grey sky, mist and fog. Another view of Dublin, large grey building with a green roof stands in the middle. Close-up of Dublin's fine buildings, two city double decker buses pass by pillared grey building, pedestrians walk along. Busy main street in Dublin, tall vertical monument stands on the right, large 19th century grey building with pediment and large pillars stands opposite, lots of traffic. View of side street, shops and vegetable stalls line the street, man on a bicycle, a horse and cart and a van pass by. Close up of vegetable stall, woman in spotted head scarf arranges tomatoes, another woman enters shot and handles oranges.
Industrial town, Dublin, image of chimneys and factory pollution, view extends into the distance. Guinness brewery, copper lidded containers. Large white containers, man in blue overalls works in the distance. Warehouse, large silver barrels are rolled by two men. Close-up of two men rolling the barrels onto lorries. Four Guinness trucks lined side by side in depot, one pulls away, all have Guinness written in gold above the windscreen. View of bulk containers, grey, Guinness written in black type across them, truck moves container out of shot. 'Hyster' yellow truck lowers the container onto the lorry. Distillation factory, bleak and dark building, camera pans down lorry with 'Copes' written in white type as it backs into the building.
Large container empties barley. Close-up of barley being poured to make whiskey. Close-up of distillation machinery, man stands in white coat. Close-up of a man opening a hatch on the distiller, temperature device attached to machine. Men push boxes of whiskey out of the warehouse to be exported. Close-up of box; 'Special John Jameson, Liqueur Whiskey, 12 years old' is written in black type across the box.
Red truck in foreground of large white factory, possibly for bacon curing or meat packing. Interior of factory, hanging meat carcasses and men working in white uniform, carcasses are sprayed with water. Men working on the factory floor, conveyor belt with large pieces of raw meat move along the line. Close-up men, sleeves of white overalls are bloody from handling the meat, they cut meat into smaller chunks, preparing it for export. Close-up of a slab of meat being chucked onto a smaller conveyor belt. Bagged carcasses on pulleys are pushed by factory worker, he is wearing glasses, other workers stand in the distance. Close-up of carcasses moving along the line, worker stands at the end.
Post-WWII - 1951, Ireland 220609-06 | Footage Farm
Footage Farm is a historical audio-visual library. The footage in this video constitutes an unedited historical document and has been uploaded for research purposes. Some viewers may find the archive material upsetting. Footage Farm does not condone the views expressed in this video.
[Post-WWII - 1951, Ireland]
07:48:06 Scenics of Killarney lakes; tourists; landscapes. Tourist getting onto horse & cart outside hotel, waving. American (?) tourists mounting horses & pony trekking, riding along gravel road.
07:49:19 Blarney Castle, County Cork. Tourists kissing the Blarney stone. Remains of early church & castle; castle & house belonging to Sir Walter Raleigh. Wind vanes. Bubbling stream / river - falls / rapids.
07:50:36 CU sign: Office of Public Works - Brosna Drainage. Dragline excavating to open bog land & dredging the river. Trench drainage machine cutting thru bogs.
07:51:29 Small electrical transformer, once level w/ ground now on stilts as bog has dropped three feet.
07:51:40 Men cutting peat by hand, stacking turf laid out to dry. Donkey & cart loaded. Stacks of peat.
07:52:23 Small cottage w/ smoking chimney from peat fire. Men piling up peat moss. Moss in bales w/ woman stitching cover for exporting.
07:52:52 Mechanical digger of peat. Men putting dried peat on conveyor belt. Peat loaded into railroad cars from conveyor.
07:53:46 Small train takes freight cars of peat to electric power station & raised onto elevated railway - fed into bunkers.
07:54:47 Montage: power station - pylons; thatched cottage; Sign: Rural electrification; power lines across fields; construction work on tower of thermal power station. Hydro-electric dam.
07:55:52 LS sugar beet refinery. Pan from ruins to limestone quarry w/ men moving rock by hand; steam shovel loading American trucks & trailers; haul & spread limestone onto nearby farm fields.
07:57:11 Tractor plowing furrows. Tractor turning hay to dry; farm workers / laborers turning hay & making haystacks.
07:57:50 Traditional farmhouse, boy w/ donkey, geese in yard, pigs in pens, chickens out of coop. Cattle in fields. Cattle market for export.
07:58:47 Dublin city center w/ traffic & various street scenes & buildings. Man buys eggs from woman street peddler. Scenics.
07:59:42 End credits.
Marshall Plan; Electrical Industry; Modernization; 1950s; Agriculture; Post-WW2;
For broadcast quality material of this reel or to know more about our Public Domain collection, contact us at info@footagefarm.co.uk
2009 Samuel Beckett Bridge Dublin
Dublin’s Samuel Beckett Bridge, designed by internationally renowned architect Santiago Calatrava cost €60 million and took ten years to complete. The 120-metre long, 48-metre high bridge spans the river Liffey from Sir John Rogerson’s Quay near Macken Street on the south side to Guild Street at the site of the new National Convention Centre on the north side.
It was one of two bridges commissioned from Calatrava by Dublin City Council in 2000. The other, the James Joyce Bridge, opened at Blackhall Place near Heuston Station on Bloomsday, June 16th, 2003. The bridge was projected in 1998 to cost £10 million, but the costs ultimately rose to almost €60 million. Designed to represent a harp on its side the cable-stayed bridge was made in the Netherlands and arrived in Dublin on a barge.
Photos by John O Rourke kaysschool.com
cycling Dublin: Smithfied to Drumcondra
cycling Dublin: Smithfied to Drumcondra
Traffic In Old Horses (1960)
Item title reads - Traffic in old horses.
Dublin, Southern Ireland (Republic of Ireland, Eire).
M/S elevated shot of horses being led into an open box on the quayside at Dublin. M/S of people outside the locked gate with protest banners. M/S box with two horses in it, it is swung onto Dutch ship Theano by crane. M/S as crate is lowered into a hold. M/S as the other horses in the hold are fed with hay. M/S people marching with protest banners. C/U one of the banners which reads Stop Export of Horses for Slaughter.
M/S horses being led towards camera on their way to the quayside. M/S horses going through the gates of the docks. M/S protest marchers with their banners. M/S City of Waterford cargo boat where 40 horses died on rough crossing. C/U name on side of boat. M/S horses in hold of the City of Waterford. C/U legs of one of the horses standing in his stall. C/U two of the horses standing together. M/S holds being covered.
FILM ID:1662.44
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British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website.
drive up antrim road
antrim road belfast
10 Must dos When In Dublin
10 Must-dos When In Dublin.
Few places around the world lend a friendlier hand than Dublin. The Emerald Isle offers wonderful hospitality, complemented by its warm and friendly hosts. A cosmopolitan city, Dublin is rightly proud of its rich heritage, but also presents a modern face in keeping with contemporary culture.
1. Trinity College.
Housing the Book of Kells, a near two century old manuscript written by monks, Trinity College is Dublin’s oldest university, built in 1592.
2. Christ Church Cathedral.
Dublin’s oldest building dates back nearly one thousand years to 1038. It was built courtesy of the invading Vikings, a monument to serve a powerful army.
3. Dublin Castle.
Dating back to the Norman invasion, this wonderful example of medieval architecture captures the artistic influence of the time. Magnificent painted ceilings and crystal chandeliers portray the Ireland of one thousand years ago.
4. National Gallery of Ireland.
Monet and Picasso are just two of the influential artists on display in the city’s largest gallery. Some 2,500 paintings give a flavour of a historic past and present.
5. Guinness Storehouse.
Ireland’s most famous export was once brewed in this famous old building. Since relocated, the Guinness Storehouse now delights in telling its visitors how one of the world’s favourite beverages came to be.
6. Temple Bar.
Contrasting Dublin’s historic ancestry, Temple Bar brings the city right up to modern day with its cosmopolitan mix of bars, restaurants, shops and art galleries.
7. Smithfield Village.
More eating, drinking and shopping can be found at Smithfield Village, a newly renovated development. A walk to the top of the Chimney presents magnificent, panoramic views of Dublin.
8. Grafton Street.
Big name department stores trade alongside local craft shops in the busiest shopping area of Dublin. Traditional Irish gifts and souvenirs can be found more easily in the adjacent Nassau Street.
9. Pint of Guinness.
No visit to Ireland would be complete without a tipple of the world famous Irish Guinness. Locals say it tastes better in its home city. Well, there’s only one way to find out!
10. Irish Grand National.
You can smell the money amongst the punters present at one of the great sporting events of the calendar. Join the runners and riders during the month of April to witness the Irish Grand National.
aer, aerlingus, aib, dublin, eircom, eire, gaa, galway, grafton, hibernian, holyhead, ryannair
Coca Cola Truck visits The Strand Bar
Coca Cola Truck visits The Strand Bar, Strandhill, Co. Sligo, Ireland