Showing posts with label Things to do in Arklow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Things to do in Arklow. Show all posts

Friday, 30 December 2016

A New Year’s Resolution For Arklow

A New Year’s Resolution For Arklow 


The hard truth facing the main street. It's basically dead.
The end of the year is always the time where people decide what they want to achieve in the next 12 months. To take stock of where they are going, and where they've been. I set up this blog 6 months ago as a way to promote Arklow to the outside world, to show them all the positives about the town and that even with all the doom and gloom that seems almost constant in the media, there are good people here that are trying their hardest to aid our recovery. Whether it be businesses, new sports clubs, museums or art societies we have a community of great people that deserve to be represented.

But Arklow is far from perfect, and over the last month I took a hard look at just how bad things were. And to be honest the one thing about Arklow that desperately needs improvement is it's Main Street. Let's be honest, it's dead. People like to blame The Bridgewater Shopping Centre for taking away all the footfall of the Main Street, but do you honestly believe that if that centre wasn't there that the situation would be any different? We'd have an even bigger unemployment problem (The centre is currently one of the biggest employers in Wicklow) and Arklow would be just another black hole of a town that people couldn't wait to escape for the big city. People use the shopping centre as an excuse when it should be seen as an opportunity to bring people to the main street.

An all to familiar site at the moment

If you walk down the Main Street, you know exactly what  mean. We are constantly told the benefits of what happens when you shop local, about how it keeps money in the local community. But there are so few shops left that it feels sometimes that there is actually no point going there at all. And believe me, I had to resort to using maths to asses the situation. I walked from the top of the Main Street to the bottom and counted every single building (143) and then ignored every building that was a house or a place of residence which left 127 buildings that could be used for a shop. and out of those 127 buildings, 43 are empty and have been empty for a long time. So roughly one third of the shops are closed, which doesn't sound too horrifying. But some of these units are absolutely huge, the biggest being the old Ormonde Cinema site, and the Alps behind it.


 The Alps site is approximately 6.75 acres that is absolutely going to waste. It's a golden opportunity to inject some sort of spark into the Main Street and the town as a whole, and it's just sitting there falling apart. A google search leaves a long and confusing history of what it was going to be, but that doesn't really matter because at the moment it's a big chunk of nothing. A while back I asked people on the Arklow Online Facebook Page if they could have any store on the Main Street what would it be. 

The answer? Penneys, and by an overwhelming margin. So I did the most sensible thing I could think of. I e-mailed Penneys and asked if in the past they had or currently have any plans to build in Arklow. And the answer was pretty much what I expected, and from the e-mail itself  " we are not aware of any immediate or current plans to open in your area at this time". Disappointing, but what can you expect when there is 6.75 acres of land hanging around and it's almost impossible to find out whats going on with it? I mean I live in the town and I don't know whats happening with it, so what is someone who want to do business in Arklow supposed to do? 


The problem facing the Main Street is a vicious circle, big businesses (or businesses of any kind) don't want to operate on the Main Street because there's no footfall, and there's no footfall because people feel like there's nothing on the Main Street. But I would bet my life that if that Alps site was put to good use and a big player was invited to open a flagship store in Arklow, the footfall would go through the roof and into outer space. But the sad truth is nobody wants to take that risk, and as a result the Main Street is rotting, a hollow shell of what it once was a long time ago.


So what could Arklows New Years resolution be? Maybe just to start a discussion. A conversation about who owns all these buildings and empty spaces, and how exactly we can better utilize them. How we can get the ball rolling and jump start Arklows revival. And in one years time who knows what the outcome will be? But I know there are people here that don't want the town to die a sad, prolonged death, and I have faith in them that 2017 might not be the end of Arklow, but the start.

Thursday, 7 July 2016

Things To Do In Arklow #1- Arklow Maritime Museum

Things to do in Arklow #1 - Arklow Maritime Museum


Arklow has had a long and illustrious maritime history. Ever since the Vikings first landed here and dubbed the tiny plot of land "Arnkell", the sea has almost been the veins that flowed into Arklow providing it with prosperity right up to the turn of the 20th century when Arklow was Ireland's finest fishing port.

The Arklow Maritime museum is a tribute to the strong sea faring history and tradition of the town. The museum relocated to a space at the Bridgewater Centre, and from the outside it looks deceptively small, tucked away between a cafe and the local Eddie Rockets restaurant. But appearances can be very deceiving as we came up the stairs and saw a giant space packed with just under two thousand individual pieces of  maritime memorabilia.

The museum has been around for about thirty years, but its new location is very crisp and clean. It doesn't feel like museums I've been too before where everything feels dusty and hidden away. This history is here to be celebrated. The view of the Avoca river from the balcony is also stunning, and the fact that the port is just a few minutes down the road gives you the sense that you are standing in the centre where all this history happened so many years ago.



The view for the balcony, even on a cloudy day it looks stunning.



When you enter the museum, the people there are friendly and incredibly knowledgeable about the great amount of history that has happened over the hundreds of years that Arklow has existed, and how its maritime roots allowed it to thrive. We got to watch a short fifteen minute documentary about the history of Arklows maritime roots and then spent a good hour exploring the exhibit. There is so much to see and learn about, and some of the facts are guaranteed to surprise you.


It's so interesting to look at the exhibits and learn about the experiences and accomplishments of men and women from Arklow, and its fantastic to have a place where they can be remembered and respected.




A womans shoe obtained during the sinking
of the HMS Lusitania 
Its also incredible to hear just how much Arklow had an impact on the world in times gone by. The very first RNLI station was established in Arklow one hundred and eighty years ago, with a some of the artifacts from the period now in the museum. When the HMS Lusitania was sunk in May 1915, it was two Arklow captains who were the first on the scene to try and provide assistance to the people overboard. The museum contains both the medals received by German
officers who shot the Lusitania down, and also the shoe of a woman who fell overboard one hundred and one years ago.

If I were to try and explain every part of the museum and every one of the nearly two thousand exhibits I would most probably be writing a book on the subject. But if you're in the area and have a few hours to kill it's definitely worth your while popping in to the Arklow Maritime Museum and seeing for yourself just how much impact the sea had on Arklow, and just how much impact Arklow had on the sea.

If you'd like to find out more about the Arklow Maritime Museum you can visit their website at http://www.arklowmaritimeheritage.ie/ or you can find them on Facebook