1893 plan of Spencer Dock areaOne of two stone plaques commemorating the opening of Spencer Dock in April 1873 either side of the lifting bridge at Sheriff Street[1]
The main building in the area was previously the former North Wall railway station which formed the terminus bringing goods and passengers to the quays.
History
London and North Western Hotel, Dublin (1884) - lies at the front of North Wall Quay facing the river as part of the new Spencer Place development
The dockland area was originally part of the end of the Royal Canal, which still reaches the River Liffey here.
1873 docks complex
The dock was constructed in 1873 to accommodate the coal ships and other barges primarily of the Midland Great Western Railway Company and served as both a railway and canal depot. The original Sheriff Street Drawbridge was constructed in 1873 but replaced by the Sheriff Street Lifting Bridge in 1941.[3][4]
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Most of the 206,000 m2 (51 acre) site now known as Spencer Dock was owned by Córas Iompair Éireann for much of the 20th century. With increasing land values in the early 2000s and as the freight yards became surplus to requirements, it sold the land on to Treasury Holdings while retaining a 17.5% interest in the freehold. CIÉ later also sold its minority holding to a property fund managed by Davy Group. All 614 apartments in the development were sold to private buyers.[6][7]
Following the appointment of receivers over the office property, the office complex was sold in its entirety for €242m in 2016.[8][citation needed]
Geography
The original area was Spencer Dock area was defined by a ribbon of development from the Liffey along the Royal Canal up to about the Main Dublin to Belfast railway line, the two parts of Spencer Dock being separated by the bridge at Sheriff Street and separated from the Liffey by a sea lock. The modern development is defined as being part of the North Wall area of Dublin Docklands. The Point Village area lies to the east with Dublin Docklands claiming to be a small area between the two. One focal point of the area is the Luas tram stop and the adjacent park.[citation needed]
Infrastructure
Luas and road bridge spanning Spencer Dock
Rail
Spencer Dock is served by the Docklands railway station on Sheriff Street, at the north end of the site. Commuter services to the Dublin Docklands area on the Western Commuter line began in March 2007. Under the Transport 21 initiative, at one time due for completion by 2018, the station was to move south to a permanent location along New Wapping Street. This station, proposed to connect to an extended LuasRed line, was deferred due to the Post-2008 Irish economic downturn.[citation needed]
In 2014, two Dublin Bikes stations were opened, one at Guild Street and another at the convention centre.
Bridges
The Sheriff Street Lifting Bridge was installed between 1939 and 1941.[1] A single-span bascule bridge, it replaces the earlier James Price designed swivel bridge of 1873 which was the first mechanical crossing of Spencer Dock,[1] and separated its inner and outer portions.
The Spencer Dock Bridge carries road, Luas and pedestrian traffic from Dublin over the Royal Canal into the Spencer Dock area. The Spencer Dock Luas stop is some 200m to the east. The bridgec. 200m north of where the Royal Canal meets the Liffey, while the Sheriff Street Lifting bridge carrying the R101 road is a further 160m north. The bridge has a shallow desk of just 2 feet (0.61 m) thick while the width varies from 62 feet (19 m) to 95 feet (29 m).[9]
Bunbury, Turtle (2021). "Spencer Dock". Canals of Dublin – Tourism Information for the Canals of Dublin. Archived from the original on 24 January 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
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