Walkinstown | |
Settlement Type: | Suburb |
Pushpin Map: | Ireland |
Pushpin Label Position: | right |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Ireland |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Ireland |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Leinster |
Subdivision Type3: | County |
Subdivision Name3: | Dublin |
Subdivision Type4: | Council |
Subdivision Name4: | Dublin City Council |
Subdivision Type5: | Dáil Éireann |
Subdivision Name5: | Dublin South-Central |
Subdivision Type6: | European Parliament |
Subdivision Name6: | Dublin |
Unit Pref: | Metric |
Population As Of: | 2022 |
Population Footnotes: | [1] |
Population Blank1 Title: | Electoral division |
Population Blank1: | 7442 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Utc Offset1: | +0 |
Timezone1 Dst: | IST (WEST) |
Utc Offset1 Dst: | -1 |
Coordinates: | 53.3215°N -6.334°W |
Blank Name: | Irish Grid Reference |
Walkinstown is a suburb of Dublin in Ireland, six kilometres southwest of the city centre. It is surrounded by Drimnagh to the north, Crumlin to the east, Greenhills to the south, and Ballymount, Bluebell, and Clondalkin to the west. Its postal code is Dublin 12.
It consists mainly of privately owned housing, with some social housing remaining in the Dublin City Council area between the Walkinstown and Long Mile Roads and Ballymount Lower. It was built as an estate of starter homes after World War II.
Walkinstown has a library, residents' association, sports ground, community centre, schools, pubs, church, and local shops. Light industry, warehousing, car dealerships, and commercial outlet stores are concentrated along the Long Mile Road in the western sector of the suburb. The national census of 2022 recorded a population of 7,422 people for all electoral divisions labelled as Walkinstown.[1]
The name of the area is a corruption of Wilkinstown – named after Wilkins, a tenant farmer who lived in the area in the 15th century. The Irish name for the area is Irish: Baile Bhailcín.
Walkinstown as a suburb was a 20th-century creation. The area was a dairy farm until house building began in the 1930s and ended in the 1970s when most of the land was built on. A Catholic church and primary and secondary schools were built in the 1950s.
One of the most iconic moments from Ireland's unexpected success in Italia 90, the 1990 FIFA World Cup, took place at Walkinstown roundabout on 25 June 1990.[2] That afternoon, after Ireland beat Romania on penalties to make it through to the quarter finals of the competition, crowds emerged from the nearby public houses of the Kestrel and Cherry Tree and invaded the roundabout to celebrate the win. Amateur footage of the joyous scenes at the junction became synonymous with Ireland's success that year and epitomised the sense of hope prevailing throughout the country at the time.[3] In July 2020, ten days after Ireland's Italia 90 football manager Jack Charlton passed away, fans gathered at the roundabout to recreate the moment and pay their respects. Put 'Em Under Pressure, the official song of the Republic of Ireland national football team's 1990 campaign, (which features soundbites of Charlton) was played at 12:30pm that day synchronised with all radio stations nationally to remember the man who had led Ireland to their first-ever major tournament at Euro '88, as well as two World Cups in Italy (1990) and USA (1994).[4] [5]
There is some ambiguity as to the full extent of the suburb, with some claiming Walkinstown includes Greenhills, as well as one of three parts of Ballymount.
Greenhills was previously linked to Walkinstown in the Catholic Church structure to make up the Parish of Walkinstown and Greenhills, at a time when Greenhills did not have its own local church. This combined parish ceased to exist when Greenhills acquired its own parish church in 1971. Greenhills is generally regarded now as a separate and distinct suburb, with its own identity and full range of services.
The distinction between Ballymount and Walkinstown is not so well defined. Given that Ballymount has a less clear identity, many consider it to form part of Walkinstown. The area itself is primarily given over to light industry with much less residential housing than its nearest neighbour, Walkinstown. Most residential housing which exists directly borders on the Ballymount Road which itself is often listed as being in Walkinstown. Residents of Ballymount do not have their own services and so rely on Walkinstown for schools, church and commercial centres.
Walkinstown Public Library is a branch of Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive on Percy French Road. The local post office is in the supermarket on Walkinstown Road. Walkinstown Credit Union, which is affiliated to the Irish League of Credit Unions, has an office on Walkinstown Green.
The local Catholic Church, Our Lady of the Assumption on Kilnamanagh Road, is one of the largest buildings in the suburb. It forms part of a concentration of religious and educational services with a girls' school, Our Lady of the Assumption, beside the church and a boys' school, Drimnagh Castle CBS, across the Long Mile Road. Both schools provide primary and secondary education.
Walkinstown Park on Walkinstown Avenue is run by Dublin City Council. It has three football pitches and two Gaelic Athletic Association pitches. There is a tennis court, and a stream at the rear of the park. The premises of the Walkinstown Association, which provides services to people with intellectual disabilities, is on the Long Mile Road beside the Halfway House public house.
There is no local Garda Síochána (police) station. Crime protection is provided by two stations in nearby Crumlin – the Crumlin Village and Sundrive Road stations. The three local hospitals are Tallaght Hospital, Our Lady's Children's Hospital, Crumlin, and St. James's Hospital.
There is a SuperValu supermarket on Walkinstown Road. The Ashleaf Shopping Centre on Cromwellsfort Road is the nearest shopping centre where the anchor tenant, Dunnes Stores, provides supermarket and clothing retail services. A Lidl supermarket is on Walkinstown Avenue while an Aldi supermarket is on Long Mile Road.
Small commercial services such as newsagents, pharmacies, and fast food restaurants are concentrated at the intersection of the Drimnagh, Walkinstown, and Long Mile roads as well as around the Walkinstown Roundabout. There is also a Subway restaurant and Eddie Rockets restaurant, with a Polish food shop behind the Lidl supermarket on Walkinstown Avenue.
Walkinstown Roundabout is one of the busiest in the city. Its construction was held up for many years due to protracted negotiations to purchase a small whitewashed cottage on the then Walkinstown Cross (scene of many bad motor crashes). The resident was eventually rehoused in a new bungalow at the top of Walkinstown Avenue. This cottage was formerly in the centre of the new roundabout.
One of the oldest buildings in Walkinstown is Drimnagh Castle on the northern side of Long Mile Road. It dates from 1216 and is the only castle in Ireland with a flooded moat. The Halfway House pub is the oldest one in the area, predating all of the modern housing developments.[6] The pub used to be a coachhouse, halfway between Dublin and Tallaght.
Walkinstown Roundabout or Walkinstown Cross is one of the largest and most accident-prone roundabouts in Dublin. This junction serves seven local roads – Walkinstown Road towards Drimnagh, Bunting Road towards Crumlin, Cromwellsfort Road towards Kimmage and Crumlin, and St Peter's Road towards Greenhills and Templeogue, Greenhills Road towards Tallaght, Ballymount Road towards Ballymount and the M50 and Walkinstown Avenue towards Ballyfermot,
An area of Walkinstown north of Cromwellsfort Road is known as the Musical Roads. Roads in this area are named after prominent figures of Irish music such as the tenor Count John McCormack and composers Michael William Balfe, Percy French, and Edward Bunting.
Walkinstown is in the southwest of the Dublin City Council area and in local government elections is part of the Ballyfermot-Drimnagh Ward. Since the last local elections in 2014, local representatives on the council are:
Walkinstown is part of the Dáil constituency of Dublin South-Central. The TD for the 33rd Dáil are:
The first local Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) club was formed in the 1950s since when it amalgamated with others to form the present St James Gaels GAA club.
Walkinstown Athletic Football Club is the local soccer team. Walkinstown Sports and Athletic Association (WSAF) meets at Moeran Community Hall on Summerville Drive. Mooney's Field, the largest green open space in the area, is used for many field sports. The nearest municipal swimming pool is in Crumlin village.
Walkinstown United Football Club, established in 1978 and based in Walkinstown Park, is the leading football team.
Walkinstown is served by Dublin Bus routes 18, 27, 77A, 56A, 123 and 151. The 9, 17 and 150 busses pass the Ashleaf Shopping Centre/Submarine Bar, while the 122 bus terminates at Our Lady's Hospital, Crumlin, five minutes walk from the Halfway House pub.
The Dublin Bus Nitelink 77N service provides a one-way link from the city to Walkinstown after daily bus services finish at 23:30.
The Luas tram Red Line route stops nearby at Bluebell and Kylemore.
A former DHL Express mail courier depot in Walkinstown closed in 2008 and since 2018 is the primary depot for the Go-Ahead Ireland bus service.