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Lisburn Road during rush hour. Lisburn Road is a main arterial route linking Belfast and Lisburn, Northern Ireland. The Lisburn Road is now an extension of the "Golden Mile" with many shops, boutiques, wine bars, restaurants and coffee houses. The road runs almost parallel to the Malone Road, the two being joined by many side roads. It is a ...
Across Broadway in West Belfast the demographics change as the road forms the southern border of the almost exclusively Roman Catholic St. James' area. Located where this section of the road meets the Broadway intersection is the Park Centre, a shopping centre built on the former site of Celtic Park, the home of the now defunct Belfast Celtic. [4]
19 July 1972: A Protestant civilian (Henry Gray, aged 71), was shot dead by IRA members while trying to prevent the bombing of a bar in Springfield Road, Belfast. [81] 20 July 1972: A Protestant civilian, (Robert Leggett, aged 50) was shot dead attempting to stop an IRA bomb attack on his business premises, Springfield Road, Belfast. [53]
Fernhill House is located on the east side of Glencairn Road in Belfast. [1] It has an elevation of 300 feet (91 m) above sea level and enjoys views of the Mourne Mountains to the north and, across the North Channel, of the Scottish coast to the north-east. [1] The house is approached from the south by a tree-lined avenue. [1]
Belfast: Northern Ireland: Boucher Road Playing Fields — — September 3, 2023 [ae] County Laois: Ireland: Stradbally Hall — — — Leg 9 — North America September 15, 2023 [af] Louisville: United States: Kentucky Expo Center — — — September 16, 2023 [ag] Asbury Park: Asbury Park — — — September 18, 2023 [50] Reno: Grand ...
Joy's Entry is particularly narrow and connects Ann Street to High Street. It has several pubs, including Henry’s and The Jailhouse. The Entry takes its name from the Joy family who were prominent 18th century residents of the city, including Francis Joy, founder of The Belfast News Letter, and his grandson Henry Joy McCracken, after whom the pub is named.
The Arc at night in 2010. The Arc is a residential development located beside Abercorn Basin in the Titanic Quarter of Belfast, Northern Ireland.It contains 474 residential properties, a hotel, and a number of retail units, split across three buildings.
A view of upper Royal Avenue, 2011. On the right is the Belfast Central Library, which opened in 1888.. Beginning from the Donegall Place junction with Castle Place and Castle Street, which is the hub of Belfast city centre, the road runs north to the North Street crossing where the former Bank of Ireland once stood.