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Bouncy Castle Hire Inchicore

PartyZone are a Dublin based company founded in 2004 that has been providing excellent quality to customers throughout Ireland with all their Party rental needs for all occasions, including Weddings, Anniversary's, Birthdays, Christmas Parties, Christenings, Graduation Nights, New Years Parties, Retirements and Corporate Events.

We offer Garden Games, Balloons & Party Decor, DJs/Karaoke, Bouncy Castles, Marquees, Soft Play , Obstacle Courses, and much more.

Whatever your budget, whatever your type of party, event or theme, we can take care of everything, leaving you to relax and enjoy the occasion.

Contact us and our experienced staff and decorators will help you plan your birthday party, christening, anniversary, wedding, or any other event/occasion and pick the balloons and/or decorations that suit.

We offer a fast, reliable custom service and we work with the best products to provide a premier service at a very competitive price to make your event a memorable one.

We guarantee that the product and service we supply will be of the highest possible quality.
·The product you rent is guaranteed to be in excellent condition
·The electrical equipment supplied is guaranteed to be 100% water-proof
·The service you receive is guaranteed to be friendly and professional

CALL TODAY FOR A FREE QUOTE! Tel: 0851020175

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About Inchicore

Inchicore is a suburb of Dublin, Ireland. Located approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) west of the city centre, Inchicore was originally a small village separate from Dublin. The village developed around Richmond Barracks (built 1810) and Inchicore railway works (built 1846), before being incorporated into the expanding city bounds. Inchicore is a largely residential area and is home to the association football club St Patrick's Athletic FC.

Arts

Inchicore has been home to a number of poets. Michael Hartnett, lived on Tyrconnell Road from 1984 until about 1986. A plaque marks the house where he wrote some of Inchicore Haiku near Richmond Park, home to St. Patrick's Athletic Football Club. 'Inchicore Haiku' recounts the hard times in his life after his separation from his family.[citation needed]

Another Irish poet, Thomas Kinsella, was born near Sarsfield House at the Ranch and attended the Model School. He is a winner of the UCD Ulysses Medal.

Francis Ledwidge has associations with St. Michael's CBS, formerly Richmond Barracks. This is where he enlisted and trained before shipping out to the trenches in Flanders during The Great War. The Inchicore Ledwidge Society runs events to raise awareness of the life and works of the poet-soldier and holds a wreath-laying ceremony annually in the Memorial Park to honour Ledwidge.

The court-martials of all the leading figures in the 1916 Rebellion took place in Richmond Barracks. The surviving three buildings of the Barracks (formerly the recreation rooms) are in the process of being conserved. Building one has been completely refurbished as the atrium to the new Primary Health Care Centre and the gymnasium has received funding for its restoration ahead of the 1916 centenary celebrations.

The nationalist poet and teacher Padraig Pearse was imprisoned here before his execution in Kilmainham Gaol on the Inchicore Road.

The tramp writer Jim Phelan was born in Inchicore in 1896. On completing 15 years in prison for his part in the murder of a post mistress's son in a robbery in Liverpool in 1923, Phelan roamed the byways of England and wrote of his prison experience in books such as Lifer and Jail Journey and of his vagabond days in Tramping the Toby and We Follow the Roads. Phelan died in 1966.

Parks

The parks in the area include Grattan Crescent Park and Jim Mitchell Park, which hold playgrounds, as well as Turvey Park, and the park grounds adjoining the Mary Immaculate Catholic Church. To the south, there is Lansdowne Valley Park.

The Irish National War Memorial Gardens, containing a monument designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, lies just to the north of Inchicore; there is an Inchicore entrance on Con Colbert Road. It commemorates the fallen Irish of the Great War. Official record books held in museum buildings there are inscribed with the names of those who gave their lives. The gardens are also accessible from the South Circular Road, en route toward Phoenix Park, which can be accessed by crossing over Islandbridge (Sarah Bridge).

Museums

There is a museum at Richmond Barracks, which reopened in May 2016 as part of the centenary celebrations of the Easter Rising. Prisoners were taken to Richmond Barracks for processing after the surrender of the insurgents in 1916. Nearby Kilmainham Jail, now a national museum, was the scene of the execution of leaders of Easter Rising of 1916. The Irish Museum of Modern Art, housed in the Royal Hospital Kilmainham, is also nearby.

Goldenbridge Cemetery, accessible via guided tours from the nearby Richmond Barracks, was the first dedicated Catholic cemetery in Ireland that opened after Catholic Emancipation. The Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 was passed by the Duke of Wellington's government and signed by George IV under some Prime Ministerial pressure. In 1830 Daniel O'Connell, the Liberator, who was the vigorous Irish leader of the campaign for Emancipation was able to take his seat representing County Clare in the House of Commons as the first Catholic MP in the UK Parliament since 1649. Goldenbridge is the final resting place of modern Ireland's first head of government, President of the Executive Council W. T. Cosgrave who died in 1965.

Culture

There are two community centres, St Michael's and BERA. Arus Mhuire was for many years the location of a popular Sunday night dance for teenagers.[citation needed]

The area used to form part of the parish of St. James, later in a union, and served by St. James' Church, but this church has been deconsecrated, and the attached cemetery is closed and overgrown. In 2010, 7 historic parishes, in three unions, all grouped as the St. Patrick's Cathedral Group, were severed from the cathedral and established as the new Parish of St. Catherine and St. James with St. Audeon, served by St. Audeon's Church, Cornmarket, and St. Catherine and St. James' Church on Donore Avenue.

How to get to Inchicore College

The college is at the centre of the vibrant Inchicore/Kilmainham area. Our students make good use of all shops and cafés nearby as well as the Cultural sites such as Irish Museum of Modern Art, Richmond Barracks Museum, War Memorial Park, Phoenix Park and Kilmainham Jail.

Inchicore College is easily accessible with the LUAS Red line stopping around the corner at Suir Road and connecting to Tallaght, Heuston Station, Connolly Station and Dublin city centre.

College address:
Inchicore College of Further Education
Emmet Road
Inchicore
Dublin 8

(The entrance to the college is accessed from Bulfin Road in Inchicore)

Luas

Luas Red line – Stop Suir Road or Goldenbridge. Cross Canal Bridge, follow Suir Road to Traffic lights. Turn Left onto Bulfin Road. College on right after 300m.

Dublin Bus

Buses stopping close to the college: G1, G2, 13, 60, 68, 69, 123,C1, C2, C3, C4.
Find online route timetables at https://dublinbus.ie

Train

Trains stopping at Heuston Station from: Kildare, Newbridge, Sallins, Adamstown, Ronanstown

Find online route timetables at https://irishrail.ie