When Padraig and Julie Neylon moved to Frances St, Kilrush in the autumn of 2016 they were one of very few families with children to do so in four decades, the intervening three years have seen more young couples follow suit bringing life back to an area hit hard during the recession.

Returning to West Clare was an idea that had been festering in Padraigโ€™s mind for a few years with Julie spending two hours in traffic every day on the commute to work while they were based in Galway.

Upon the move, the Kilmurry McMahon man set up +AddJust which now employs five people and Julie opened Wild Atlantic Opticians in the heart of the town which welcomed the arrival of broadband soon after. This ability to communicate online coupled with flexibility, a work/life balance and nearby creche facilities are credited by the couple as big attractions to set up in Kilrush.

Recalling the early days of both businesses, Padraig said it was a period of both excitement and stress. โ€œI remember being in Julieโ€™s opticians the day she opened and very much waiting for the first person to come in the door and wondering would anyone come in the door. Thankfully she is well-established now, sheโ€™s there two and a half years and is tipping away nicely. In any business, youโ€™re going to have the mix of expectation, fear and excitementโ€.

They have seen the positives of West Clare but Padraig is concerned changes to the main artery to the area may discourage more businesses from setting up there. โ€œThere is no utopian business location anywhere in the world. One of the biggest hindrances has been the downgrading of the N68, the speed has been brought down from 100km/h to 80km/h in a lot of locations, we are in a remote location business wise and that has made it a little bit harder. I still travel to Dublin, our clients are based in Dublin and all over the country, that access to the rest of the country is something that needs to be looked atโ€.

โ€œInvestors when they are looking at a location, one of the first things they look at is infrastructure and when there is poor accessibility to an area it doesnโ€™t augur well. In the likes of Shannon youโ€™re two minutes off a motorway, if Kilrush is to ever compete for a large employer itโ€™s going to be difficult,โ€ he told The Clare Echo.

Padraig, Julie and their two daughters, Theola and Kara became the first non-Glynn family to live in Kilrush House since the 1870s but also set the way for other young couples to seriously consider Frances St when buying a home. โ€œAnother family has moved in next door to us since in one of the apartments, our kids and their kids have become good friends and itโ€™s something we would like to see a little bit more of for more kids their age to play with. There have been a few couples, Charlie and Deirdre Glynn recently got married just around the corner from us, there is another couple that have moved in next door, Suzy Glynn and James Harding, weโ€™re beginning to see a bit of a shift and itโ€™s something that hopefully will be replicated across the country with small towns becoming more attractive for young familiesโ€.

The Glynns are synonymous with the history of the market town, the dynasty continues with the aforementioned Charlie the Chair of the Kilrush Town Team which is working towards the future of Kilrush. Former St Flannans student, Padraig is one of the volunteers forming part of the team. โ€œWeโ€™re beginning to get results in terms of shaping the vision for the town with public consultation. Itโ€™s going to take time, slow and steady will win the race, weโ€™ve plans over the next couple of years to develop a few strategies and a few events for the town. Itโ€™s going quite well and itโ€™s something that will grow organically for a few years as opposed to there being one big loud bangโ€.

In assessing the decision to return to Kilrush to live and work, Padraig is relieved with their choice. โ€œWhen we go to Dublin for work and I come back I scratch my head trying to figure out how people are surviving in Dublin or getting on the property ladder and making ends meet, itโ€™s incredibly expensive, we can live on much less and have a much more comfortable lifestyle. There is a growing movement in Ireland in the last few years of chasing the zeros in salaries but itโ€™s all so they can live in a certain place but to me itโ€™s unsustainable but weโ€™re lucky that we fell into the way of thinking of having to take a step back and look at everything, our cost of living and we were lucky that Iโ€™m from the area and we could move back to set our roots here, it isnโ€™t something we actively thought of setting a model for people to move back but hopefully itโ€™s something people will consider over the next couple of years and towns like Kilrush, Ennistymon, Scariff and Newmarket-on-Fergus are viable places to come back and start a familyโ€.

Related News

galway website 1-2
Redesigned bilingual website launched by Galway County Council
lit ennis campus
TUS victim to โ‚ฌ98.5k online scam
kinvara boardwalk 1
โ‚ฌ10m tag now attached to Kinvara Boardwalk
rachael english 1
Rachael staying put on Radio One following reshuffle
Latest News
lit ennis campus
TUS victim to โ‚ฌ98.5k online scam
kinvara boardwalk 1
โ‚ฌ10m tag now attached to Kinvara Boardwalk
ruan farm 1
Ruan farm sells for โ‚ฌ1.5m
rachael english 1
Rachael staying put on Radio One following reshuffle
IMG_1935
โ€œWe're survivorsโ€ - Pink currach spreads awareness on cancer
Premium
Ennis man serving seven years for inciting rape of fellow Garda pleads guilty to PULSE disclosure
Wet & wild winning U21 starts for Inamona, Cratloe, ร‰ire ร“g & Sixmilebridge
Lovely entrance to O'Callaghans Mills at risk of removal
Avenue Utd collect first silverware of season with Hugh Kelly Cup success
Inagh/Kilnamona exit Munster at first hurdle losing to Newcastle West

Advertisement

Subscribe for just โ‚ฌ3 per month

If youโ€™re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just โ‚ฌ3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter โ‚ฌ8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.