Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Dundalk Clarke railway station (Irish: Stáisiún Uí Chléirigh) serves Dundalk in County Louth, Ireland. It consists of an island platform , with a bay facing south. It is served by the Dublin-Belfast Enterprise intercity trains as well as local Commuter services to and from Dublin.
Oriel Park and Dundalk railway station on Carrickmacross Road. Oriel Park is serviced by Dundalk-Clarke railway station on the Belfast-Dublin line, which is 500 metres from the ground. Dundalk bus terminus is located 1.5 km from the ground. Bus route 166 from Dundalk bus terminus to Carrickmacross stops at the railway station.
This station is located beside the R147 dual carriageway in Ashtown, and despite its former name is not located in the Phoenix Park, but was built to serve the Phoenix Park Racecourse Apartments constructed on grounds of the former racecourse adjacent to the park. To avoid confusion, this station was renamed Navan Road Parkway in 2011. [4] [5]
The station opened on 4 August 1846 and closed for goods traffic on 9 June 1947. The station received an upgrade in the late 2000s which added a new station building, car park, three new platforms and lifts. The original waiting rooms were retained. [1]
The locomotive on the front of the train was undamaged. The station has two platforms, platform 2 runs north to Drogheda/Dundalk, while platform 1 runs south to Dublin Pearse. The station has yellow lines and is situated on the Dublin - Belfast railway line. It also has a 19th-century design.
Other station(s) Drogheda MacBride, Dundalk Clarke ... basis which began in November 2014 with 5-car IÉ 22000 Class Trains Numbered 22036-22039 working the 07:35, 10 ...
It is the terminus station on the Docklands to M3 Parkway Western Commuter service (during peak times Monday to Friday) and Clonsilla to M3 Parkway shuttle Commuter service at all other times. It mainly serves as a large Park and Ride site, with 1,200 free car park spaces. [1] The station is no longer served by any bus routes.
It opened in the 1870s to provide a link between Dundalk and the port at Greenore, from where a ferry service operated to Holyhead. [10] The station at Bellurgan was the first stop, outside Dundalk, on the route to Greenore. [10] The line closed in 1951 and the station building was subsequently used as a private home.