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Five homes on view this week in Dublin and Wicklow from €485,000

Five homes on view this week in Dublin and Wicklow from €485,000

Irish Times4 days ago
1 Haroldville Avenue, Rialto, Dublin 8
€650,000, Mullery O'Gara
This
redbrick, end-terrace home
with handsome bay windows, extending to 110 sq m (1,184 sq ft), is a short walk from the Fatima red line Luas stop, from where you will reach Abbey Street in the city centre in 15 minutes. The turnkey two-bed property has a spacious double livingroom to the front, and a galley kitchen and diningroom to the rear of the ground floor. There are two bedrooms upstairs, as well as a converted attic room. It has fully paved back garden. Ber C3
On view:
By appointment at mulleryogara.ie
15 Holywell Grove
15 Holywell Grove, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow
€485,000, Sherry FitzGerald
READ MORE
This
three-bedroom semidetached home
, extending to 93 sq m (1,001 sq ft), comes to the market in turnkey condition with a spacious landscaped garden that houses a versatile wooden cabin. Inside, it features a livingroom to the front of the ground floor that opens to an eat-in kitchen. Upstairs, the main bedroom is en suite. It is walking distance from the village and Kilcoole beach. Ber B2
On view:
By appointment at sherryfitz.ie
58 Meadow Vale
58 Meadow Vale, Deansgrange, Blackrock, Co Dublin
€775,000, Janet Carroll Estate Agent
This
four-bedroom midterrace home
, extending to151sq m (1,625 sq ft), features a big back garden – complete with a greenhouse – in this popular coastal suburb. The home comes to the market in great condition and a prospective owner could potentially move in and modernise the interiors as they go. It is set out with four reception rooms on the ground floor with a smaller kitchen to the rear, beyond which is a shower room and a utility. Ber C3
On view:
By appointment at janetcarroll.ie
19 Marian Park
19 Marian Park, Rathfarnham, Dublin 14
€1.095m, Sherry FitzGerald
This
spacious five-bedroom home
, extending to 208 sq m (2,239 sq ft), has been modernised throughout with an open-plan kitchen/dining/livingroom at its heart. The space is flooded with natural light thanks to a picture window off the dining area, sliding doors to the garden and rooflights overhead. The back garden features a raised patio, a pond and garden room. Upstairs, the large main bedroom has a walk-through wardrobe and an en suite. Ber B2
On view:
By appointment at sherryfitz.ie
289 Collins Park, Beaumont, Dublin 9
289 Collins Park, Beaumont, Dublin 9
€525,000, DNG
This
three-bedroom semidetached home
extends to 95 sq m (1,023 sq ft) in a mature residential area a five-minute drive from Beaumont Hospital and just 10 minutes from DCU's Drumcondra campus. The home offers a lot of potential with good-sized rooms and a spacious back garden, with lawn and paving, although the interiors would benefit from a cosmetic refresh. Prospective owners could look into grants to upgrade its energy efficiency. Ber E1
On view:
By appointment at dng.ie
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Look inside: Period redbrick on South Circular Road imbued with eclectic style for €750,000
Look inside: Period redbrick on South Circular Road imbued with eclectic style for €750,000

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • Irish Times

Look inside: Period redbrick on South Circular Road imbued with eclectic style for €750,000

Address : 376 South Circular, South Circular Road, Dublin 8 Price : €750,000 Agent : DNG View this property on The handsome redbrick period home at 376 South Circular Road in Dublin 8 is imbued with eclectic interior style. The owners, who bought the home in 2018 – for €576,000 according to the Property Price Register – were attracted to its period features and have retained and restored such elements throughout the 145sq m (1,560sq ft) four-bedroom home. The house, across the road from the beautiful Our Lady of Dolours church, is set back from the road beyond a charming front yard, bordered by low cast-iron railings. The terraced home features a deep box-bay window on the ground floor, and restored sash windows, the frames of which are painted grey. The porch features black and terracotta diamond-patterned tiling underfoot. One of the owners says she loves colour, while her husband prefers a minimalist, industrial style and the juxtaposition of both works together to create a welcoming home with lots of personality. When they first moved in, they had the house rewired and replumbed and the walls were replastered and painted. Entering the home, the hallway has blue and white sun-patterned tiling that is given space to shine, coupled with the hall's high ceilings and white walls. The livingroom off the hall also benefits from high ceilings, and the owners have made the most of the box-bay window by placing a mustard-coloured chaise longue under it. The floors here are the original wood, restored with additional salvage boards. A wood-burning stove sits in the fireplace, flanked by a selection of contemporary tiles by Wicklow-based artist Alanna Plekkenpol. READ MORE Entrance hall Livingroom Diningroom opens up to the livingroom Diningroom Kitchen Kitchen The substantial original wooden doors open into the diningroom, which features an original fireplace and a sash window overlooking the garden. The doors can be left open to create a dual-aspect cohesive space, perfect for entertaining or daily family life. The long dual-aspect kitchen is accessed down two steps to the rear of the house. Here the duality of styles really comes into play with a no-messing stainless-steel double oven housed in an exposed brick hearth, coupled with dark-green and white kitchen units, and an exposed-wood dining table with three glass-bauble pendant lights above it. There is also underfloor heating in the kitchen. As well as a paved patio outside the French doors, there is also a lovely seating area at the end of the garden, past a faux lawn, and shrubs and trees that can flourish in the northeast-facing space. There is also access to a gated laneway to the rear. Back inside, the main bathroom and a bedroom sit on the first-floor return. The spacious bathroom has bright blue tiles underfoot and white metro tiles and exposed brick on the walls. As well as a separate shower, it features a claw-foot Victorian bath, which the owners discovered hidden behind tiling when they moved in. Bedroom with pink wardrobes Bedroom Bathroom Back garden Back garden On the first floor, the main bedroom sits to the rear with built-in floor-to-ceiling wardrobes painted blush pink, with a second large double to the front. There is also a small room that is used as a home office that could also make a good nursery. This fine period home, with a C3 Ber, is a 10-minute drive or 35-minute walk from Dublin city centre, and is now on the market through DNG, seeking €750,000.

Golfer Leona Maguire: ‘I wanted to beat my twin Lisa. She wanted to beat me'
Golfer Leona Maguire: ‘I wanted to beat my twin Lisa. She wanted to beat me'

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • Irish Times

Golfer Leona Maguire: ‘I wanted to beat my twin Lisa. She wanted to beat me'

Bags of clubs are lined up like sentries outside Carton House in Co Kildare where golfers from all over the world are preparing for the KPMG Irish Women's Open. I'm here to talk to Leona Maguire, a trailblazing pioneer of Irish women's golf. Inside the clubhouse, some of the golfers, athletic-looking types in pristine sportswear, are helping themselves from a protein-forward buffet. One woman walks past carrying an abstemious looking plate loaded with three boiled eggs and a lump of brown soda bread. Maguire, it turns out, is also fond of an egg. I find this out during the quick-fire round of our interview. I've only been given half an hour with the Irish golfing legend so I figure I better get as many questions in as possible and hope a few rapid inquiries towards the end of our chat will prove an efficient use of the time. When I ask about her favourite post-round snack or meal she says she loves breakfast. 'I'd have breakfast for any meal.' The Cavan woman is picky about her eggs, though. 'We grew up with chickens and hens at home, so I'm very particular about my eggs. They have to be real eggs; they can't be any of the powdered stuff sometimes you get in some hotels. They have to have yolks with almost an orangey tint to them.' I tell her about the woman I saw earlier with the boiled eggs. 'Yeah,' she says, confirming the eating habits of her fellow golfers, 'there's a lot of ham and cheese and boiled eggs.' The hens and chickens she grew up around were in Ballyconnell, Co Cavan, where she and her twin sister Lisa were golfing child prodigies with two schoolteacher parents. Does she remember her first experiences with golf? 'Dad got us three clubs and we started off at the par-three course down at the Slieve Russell' (the golf and country club formerly owned by businessman Sean Quinn). READ MORE They soon went further afield, 'playing with the boys, four-hole competitions. It was a Mars bar for the winner kind of thing.' Were they beating the boys? 'Probably not in the beginning … eventually we graduated to nine holes and 14 holes and then we were playing with the boys more regularly … they quite enjoyed having the help and there was slagging if they lost, but they were always very good about it.' [ Leona Maguire factor clear for all to see as 15 home-based players join her at Irish Open Opens in new window ] There seemed to be no other girls playing at the time; the Maguire twins were a golfing anomaly. She remembers there was the attitude of 'ah, girls playing golf – when they get to be teenagers, they'll give it up. But Dad saw past that. He saw there were opportunities out there for women in sport.' It helped to have a twin also in the game. 'There were two of us. That was a nice thing. We always had each other.' They were only 11 when they were asked to carry the Ryder Cup trophy into the K Club for the presentation ceremony in 2006, the year Europe beat the US in a decisive victory. The pictures show two grinning girls, ponytails swinging, wearing matching red trousers as they hold the cup high. Leona Maguire (right) with her twin sister and caddie Lisa at a pro-am event before the Irish Open at Mount Juliet Estate in Co Kilkenny in 2022. Photograph: Ross Kinnaird/Getty I met her twin Lisa earlier, while Leona was getting photos taken. Lisa turned professional in 2018, the same year as her sister, but retired a year later. She's now a newly graduated dentist, starting a job in Cork later this year. Were they competitive growing up? 'Oh, definitely,' she tells me. They're still close. Lisa spent the past few weeks with her sister in Detroit, while Leona played the Dow Championships as part of a duo called the Irish Goodbyes . 'We were very close, but also I wanted to beat her as well,' Leona smiles when asked about rivalry with her twin. 'We were competitive from a young age. It didn't matter what it was. My mam always said we'd fight over snakes and ladders. I wanted to beat Lisa. She wanted to beat me, but if I didn't win, I wanted to see her win as well. So we'd fall out and fall in just as quickly. It never lasted very long, but I think that brought us both on without realising it.' Was she disappointed when Lisa made the decision to retire? 'I mean, it'd be nice to have her out on tour but at the same time it's nice to see her happy and doing well and excelling in something that she's good at. I think she deserves a lot of credit for choosing her own path.' Long before turning professional Maguire, who is now 30, made her mark on golf. She was ranked best in the world for a record 135 weeks as an amateur, winning the Mark H McCormack Medal three times for being the top-ranked woman amateur globally. On a scholarship at Duke University in the US, where she studied psychology and marketing management, she won several college titles and awards for outstanding play. The wins kept coming when she turned professional in 2018. The following year she won two tournaments on the Symetra Tour. In 2022, she became the first Irish woman to win on the LPGA (Ladies Professional Golfing Association) tour landing the historic victory in the Drive On Championship. She played a starring role in Europe's Solheim Cup victories in 2021 and 2023. Leona Maguire celebrates with the Solheim Cup after Europe's victory over the United States in Toledo, Ohio in 2021. Photograph: Maddie Meyer/Getty Last year was a big one: she became the only Irish woman to win on the LGPA European Tour, won the Aramco Team Series event in London and was inducted into the Women's Golf Coaches Association Hall of Fame. If you go on the LGPA website and search for her name, you learn that since turning professional seven years ago she's racked up just over $5 million (around €4.2 million) in prize money. What does she spend it on? 'We came from a modest background. I don't need a lot of money to keep me happy. I'm not big into material things. I don't have a big handbag or watch collection.' She tells me she's building a home in Cavan which will make a fair dent in her savings and, as a keen cook and baker, she likes going to fancy restaurants when she travels. There is a lot of travel. She's been competing in China and Singapore in the past year – the golf season is long, beginning in January and not ending until November. [ Leona Maguire: 'I was in China and Pádraig rang me from Arizona to give me his opinion on things' Opens in new window ] When I tell people I am going to interview Maguire, inevitably some golfing enthusiasts look for tips. One of my brothers has a more existential question: 'Will you ask her why I play so well some weeks and so badly other times?' Maguire laughs, feeling my brother's pain. 'Time, it's just time,' she says. 'We always joke with people in the pro ams that if they are very good at golf they are probably not spending enough time in the office. It's one of those annoyingly frustrating sports … even for us at our level there are things you'll be great at one day and not so good the next. But you always hit one shot that keeps you coming back the next day'. In this, the psychology degree comes in handy, especially when experiencing a dip in form: 'Golf is one of those sports where you lose more times than you win. So you have to take the lows with the highs and you have to be resilient and mentally strong.' Leona Maguire: 'When we were growing up women weren't allowed in some clubhouses.' Photograph: Scott Taetsch/Getty She's a huge sports fan herself, enthusing about her colleagues in elite Irish sport, listing women such as 'Katie Taylor, Kellie Harrington, Rachael Blackmore and Sonia O'Sullivan.' 'I'm a huge admirer of theirs and we swap stories'. She's been to the Olympics three times. [ Irish women on top of the sporting world Opens in new window ] Golf is traditionally a male-dominated sport – 'when we were growing up women weren't allowed in some clubhouses'. Maguire has seen women's golf evolve over the past 20 years. How could it be better promoted? 'I think it would be nice to see it on TV more often and in better time slots,' she says. 'It used to be just a highlights package at midnight on a Thursday or something like that. It's starting to get more and more prime-time slots. 'The big thing is getting as many people out to Carton House this week. When people come and watch, they're very impressed with the standard and even a lot of men would say when they come out to watch us it's more relatable, and they pick up more things about the rhythm and the timing and the accuracy of it. They're quite impressed. So I think the biggest thing is getting more eyes on it, and then once the eyes are there, we can retain the fans.' We have a few minutes left for the quick-fire round. Coffee or Tea? 'Tea,' she says quick as a flash. 'I don't drink coffee.' Morning round or afternoon tee-off? 'Morning.' Who would win in a putting contest between her and her twin sister Lisa? 'Well, probably me now but back in the day, I don't know,' she says smiling diplomatically. Any golfing superstitions? She tells me about a lucky ball marker she's carried around in a pouch for 15 years, it has a shamrock on one side and the Slieve Russell on the other. Golfers typically have long careers, Maguire could have another 30 or 40 years in the sport. 'I don't know about that but I don't see myself stopping any time soon,' she says. 'I enjoy what I do. I always say I've one of the best offices in the world. It changes every week. I'm very lucky to have the job I do. It's brought me to some incredible places.'

Five homes on view this week in Dublin and Wicklow from €485,000
Five homes on view this week in Dublin and Wicklow from €485,000

Irish Times

time4 days ago

  • Irish Times

Five homes on view this week in Dublin and Wicklow from €485,000

1 Haroldville Avenue, Rialto, Dublin 8 €650,000, Mullery O'Gara This redbrick, end-terrace home with handsome bay windows, extending to 110 sq m (1,184 sq ft), is a short walk from the Fatima red line Luas stop, from where you will reach Abbey Street in the city centre in 15 minutes. The turnkey two-bed property has a spacious double livingroom to the front, and a galley kitchen and diningroom to the rear of the ground floor. There are two bedrooms upstairs, as well as a converted attic room. It has fully paved back garden. Ber C3 On view: By appointment at 15 Holywell Grove 15 Holywell Grove, Kilcoole, Co Wicklow €485,000, Sherry FitzGerald READ MORE This three-bedroom semidetached home , extending to 93 sq m (1,001 sq ft), comes to the market in turnkey condition with a spacious landscaped garden that houses a versatile wooden cabin. Inside, it features a livingroom to the front of the ground floor that opens to an eat-in kitchen. Upstairs, the main bedroom is en suite. It is walking distance from the village and Kilcoole beach. Ber B2 On view: By appointment at 58 Meadow Vale 58 Meadow Vale, Deansgrange, Blackrock, Co Dublin €775,000, Janet Carroll Estate Agent This four-bedroom midterrace home , extending to151sq m (1,625 sq ft), features a big back garden – complete with a greenhouse – in this popular coastal suburb. The home comes to the market in great condition and a prospective owner could potentially move in and modernise the interiors as they go. It is set out with four reception rooms on the ground floor with a smaller kitchen to the rear, beyond which is a shower room and a utility. Ber C3 On view: By appointment at 19 Marian Park 19 Marian Park, Rathfarnham, Dublin 14 €1.095m, Sherry FitzGerald This spacious five-bedroom home , extending to 208 sq m (2,239 sq ft), has been modernised throughout with an open-plan kitchen/dining/livingroom at its heart. The space is flooded with natural light thanks to a picture window off the dining area, sliding doors to the garden and rooflights overhead. The back garden features a raised patio, a pond and garden room. Upstairs, the large main bedroom has a walk-through wardrobe and an en suite. Ber B2 On view: By appointment at 289 Collins Park, Beaumont, Dublin 9 289 Collins Park, Beaumont, Dublin 9 €525,000, DNG This three-bedroom semidetached home extends to 95 sq m (1,023 sq ft) in a mature residential area a five-minute drive from Beaumont Hospital and just 10 minutes from DCU's Drumcondra campus. The home offers a lot of potential with good-sized rooms and a spacious back garden, with lawn and paving, although the interiors would benefit from a cosmetic refresh. Prospective owners could look into grants to upgrade its energy efficiency. Ber E1 On view: By appointment at

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