Abaara topic: Ballymun flats

 

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Ballymun flats

The Ballymun Flats were bulit in the 1960s to accomadate the rising population. However the flats had a major disadvantage in that there were no services such as hospitals or schools or tansport facilities were the residents could travel. This in turn meant that the area had many social problems such as drugs with rampant crime as well as many other problems. During the 1990s many improvments were made but it was too little too late. The Ballymun Flats tower block complex in Ballymun, Dublin, Ireland, is scheduled for demolition. The regeneration of the area will transform not only Dublin's Northside skyline, but also the whole of Dublin from the airport to the city centre.

The seven landmark towers were named for the leaders of the Easter 1916 rising as follows:

and the six remaining towers are clearly visible from the adjacent Dublin airport.

It's thought that the line "I see seven towers, but I only see one way out" from U2's song "Running to Stand Still" (on "The Joshua Tree" album) refer to these towers.

Unbelievably, the red aircraft-warning beacon lights on these structures were not connected to any form of back-up power for many years, leaving the towers completely dark in a power outage.

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This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 

 
Page topic: Ballymun flats