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    Cabinteely Park

    4.7 (3 reviews)
    Open 8:00 am - 9:00 pm

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    13 years ago

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    14 years ago

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    10 years ago

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    Blackrock Park

    Blackrock Park

    (9 reviews)

    Booterstown

    Perfect park for walking/cycling any time of the year, specially during summer time!…read more Sometimes I think it is not well-kept by the city council - some parts of it really deserve some attention... but the place looks lovely anyway. If you start from the Booterstown station you can have a view of Howth. There is a Martelo tower on the way to Blackrock. There's a lovely small lake with a little house in the middle. A flock of swans are always around. On summer days bring a book and enjoy yourself a little. A walk for Sandymount to Blackrock is about one hour and the view is just lovely all the way.

    Blackrock Park is a space of sloping greenery and water overlooked by the DART-line. It's home to…read morea flock of swans (nastier than they look!) and an island in the middle of its small lake. The fountain which sprouts from the lake is known as the 'Peace Fountain' and was constructed in 1986 to mark the International Year for Peace. Has to be said though - the park itself is a little on the dilapidated side. The Blackrock area boasts a number of large offices blocks so you'll often see suited ladies and gents taking a break at lunchtime and enjoying the tranquillity of the park. You can peer at them as you whizz by next time on the DART. History buffs may be interested to know that Rock Road, which runs alongside the park, is said to be one of the oldest roads in the country. Apparently it was part of the ancient Slighe Chualann which was constructed by a King's order several centuries before St. Patrick!

    The People's Park

    The People's Park

    (15 reviews)

    €€

    Glasthule

    The Peoples Park is a nice clean park. Great for a lazy summers day, especially with Teddy's famous…read moreice cream and the sea side just out the back. It gets busy on Sundays for the Farmers Market(11-4) which has a great and varied selection of food from all over. Can be a bit twee, but that goes with the territory at these things. It's not just restricted to food though, there are some cracking bookstalls and a few craft ones too. This is where I discovered Paulo Coelho, I'm in debt. Now, to business. Traditionally there are three days a year in which Dun Laoghaire stops hovering on the verge of crap and makes the great leap forward into being the greatest place in the world. The Festival of World Cultures, although it's just two days this year(29/30th Aug), is the best weekend in Dublin. Sun, sea, hippies, pints and banging samba drums all for free(except pints of course, but where there's a will...). It's pure awesome, and the Park is one of the festivals main hubs. Love it.

    The People's Park in Dun Laoghaire is a charming little patch of greenery overlooking the…read morecoastline. It's the perfect place for lazing about on a sunny day. It boasts some cute little tearooms and one of the few Sunday farmers markets on the southside (though I'm open to correction on this one). There's a mellow buzz in the air during the market and even if you're not hungry, you're sure to snack on some of the fudge, falafel or fruit that the traders have to offer before leaving. Tends to be happy families in here on a sunny Sunday and there is often some impromptu entertainment in the offing too. It's picturesque and nautically themed with a boat overflowing with flowers at the entrance.

    Booterstown Marsh Nature Reserve

    Booterstown Marsh Nature Reserve

    (6 reviews)

    Booterstown

    What I don't understand about this place is the fact that it apparently makes sense to have a…read morenature reserve (a teeny tiny one I might add) squished between a fairly busy main road and the DART tracks. OK, Tweety and all his mates have a lovely view of the sea, but what good is that when they're choking on petrol fumes? Not to mention quenching their thirst in a disgustingly polluted streamy thing that barely merits the name. I reckon the County Council must secretly have it in for them...

    The southern shore of Dublin Bay was once fringed with salt marshes, coastal lands rich in marine…read moreand bird life. Booterstown marsh is the last remaining section of marshland left in Dublin, now a protected ecological nature reserve and bird sanctuary. Brambles, thistles and bindweeds grow right up to the wall along the Rock Road, a natural protection against the intrusion of people or predatory animals into the marsh, though the evidence of human influence is depressingly prominent in the number of torn plastic bags, drinks cans and the odd shopping trolley that litters the area. Watercress, wild celery and a range of grasses and reeds are the most prolific of the plantlife that thrives in the silty ponds. During the summer, wild flowers like buttercups, foxgloves and mauve sea aster can be seen. The soft mud on the surface of the marsh is home to freshwater molluscs and worms, and the moist conditions are ideal for insects like mosquitoes and midges. The insects in turn attract the birds - mallards and moorhens are common, and you are almost guaranteed to spot at least one heron, who use the marsh for roosting. Oystercatchers and wading birds come here to feed, and in the summer, swallows and swifts come to feast on the flying insects. The best place to view the birds is from the main road, or get up even closer by peeking over the low wall on the Booterstown DART Station northbound platform.

    Cabinteely Park - parks - Updated May 2026

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