Operational phased closures came into effect at Parnell St on Friday as part of a โ‚ฌ3.3m development into an area that has been described as capturing โ€œthe medievalโ€ town of Ennis.

Irish Water in conjunction with Clare County Council have begun the process of replacing over 650m of cast iron pipes along the street with modern plastic equivalents, which it is hoped will reduce bursts and outages. The subsequent interruptions are due to last eight weeks.

Senior executive officer with the local authority, Leonore Oโ€™Neill at the September meeting of the Ennis Municipal District outlined their intention to appoint a tender in mid December with the view of starting works in January 2020 and completing them in November. โ€œThis scheme is progressing currently on schedule, hopefully it will be very well received by all affected partiesโ€.

As part of the redevelopment of Parnell St, the entire street will be resurfaced with natural stone materials, street furniture will be installed and the historic laneways will be upgraded.

Mayor of Ennis, Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) acknowledged the process would be โ€œvery disruptiveโ€ and that it was the first major development of Ennis 2040.

Fianna Fรกilโ€™s Pat Daly who grew up in the area outlined his vision for it to become Clareโ€™s equivalent to Quay St in Galway. โ€œIt is a very exciting project for Parnell St, the place is crying out for development. In the future it will give a great positive result, I would like it to be similar to Quay St in Galway when it is finished. There are so many shops in the street closed, there should be pressure put on owners of the closed properties to open their premises or lease, it is terrible to see on a main street in the capital of Clareโ€.

As pointed out by Cllr Mary Howard (FG), the project will be completed this time next year. โ€œI always describe Ennis as a medieval town with a 21st century heart, the bow-ways and lanes are so unique to the town of Ennisโ€. She suggested dialogue be opened with owners of the properties that โ€œare almost becoming derelictโ€.

O’Neill stated their commitment to engage with property owners in Parnell St.ย “The physical construction of the public realm is not the end of the Councilโ€™s role with Parnell St. We will certainly look to engage and promote the revitalisation and reuse of buildings currently vacant or derelict, once works stop we will continue to work to betterment of town centre”.

Related News

mick o'dea-2
Honorary doctorate from DCU for Ennis artist Mick O'Dea
o'callaghans mills trees 1
Lovely entrance to O'Callaghans Mills at risk of removal
breathalyser garda test drink driving
Six year driving ban for Ennis man who refused to provide sample to Gardaรญ
jarlath burns miltown malbay 21-10-25 2
GAA President officially opens new Miltown Malbay facilities & unveils plaque to Comerford
Latest News
o'callaghans mills trees 1
Lovely entrance to O'Callaghans Mills at risk of removal
avenue utd v bridge utd 24-10-25 jamie roche frank gormley 1
Avenue Utd collect first silverware of season with Hugh Kelly Cup success
รฉire รณg v wolfe tones 09-08-25 alan cunningham barry keane 1
Clare coaches staying involved with Limerick for 2026
newcastle west v inagh kilnamona 26-10-25 tierna hegarty mia smith 1
Inagh/Kilnamona exit Munster at first hurdle losing to Newcastle West
breathalyser garda test drink driving
Six year driving ban for Ennis man who refused to provide sample to Gardaรญ
Premium
Six year driving ban for Ennis man who refused to provide sample to Gardaรญ
Shannon meat operator pays out โ‚ฌ2k debt to supplier
Extra time defeat 'not the end' of Truagh/Clonlara
1970s Lahinch house sells for โ‚ฌ986k
Inamona will take inspiration from previous Clare champions in Munster - O'Keeffe

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.