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This week we are going back 25 years to RA 289 dressed for route 77A on Eden Quay. Not only are we going back 25 years, but the 77A was 25 years old in 1997, having started in 1972. The route ran between the city centre and Tallaght. It's original terminus in the Tallaght area was at St. Maelruen's Park. Over the following twenty-years or so it moved to Bawnville Road, Bolbrook, Old Bawn Road and The Square. Under Network Direct in 2011 it was extended to Citywest and still operates to there to this day.

RA 239 is in CitySwift livery. The 77A was not a CitySwift route but the 77 to Jobstown was, though that only started in July 1997. RA 239 was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 1996. It was withdrawn in 2007 and sold on to an operator in the United Kingdom.

22/02/1997

This week we are going back fourteen years to 2009, and to VT 33 in Skerries on route 33X. Route 33X was an Xpresso route that started operating between Skerries and Dublin city centre (later UCD) around 2000. It was not a long-lived route and ceased to operate in 2002. It then made a return in 2007, using the M1 motorway from Lissenhall (north of Swords) and the Dublin Port Tunnel. When it came back it was not a very frequent route, with one departure in each direction, Monday - Friday. That changed in August 2009, when part of the viaduct at Malahide Estuary collapsed, and the railway line into Dublin from Drogheda / Belfast was closed. An emergency timetable saw a 33X running nearly every ten minutes in the mornings and evenings, with some during the day too. When the railway line reopened in November 2009, the 33X retained a good service frequency and today in 2023 it has about five return trips eeach weekday. 2009 also saw the evening departures from the city operate to Balbriggan (as the buses went via Balbriggan from Skerries to access the motorway on their return trips to the garage). As part of the expansion in services during the railway line closure, nearly every Dublin Bus garage provided buses to operate these services. This is how a tri-axle VT that was normally found on the Blanchardstown / Lucan routes ended up in north County Dublin. VTs became very common on the 33X for a while. VT 33 in this pictures was actually working into Dublin and not to Skerries as the destination suggests.

 

VT 33 was new to Dublin Bus in 2007. Originally allocated to Phibsoro Garage, in 2010 VT 21 - 35 moved to Donnybrook Garage as part of Network Direct changes to routes 46A and 145. VT 33 was withdrawn from service around December 2021.

 

14/09/2009

 

Originally taken: September 10, 2010

Location: Ottawa Ontario

Camera: Nikon D80

 

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You've probably heard me complaining about the lack of sunshine we've been having lately, as well as the fact that I am so tired of winter, so I thought to myself, well why not do a Throwback Thursday to include gorgeous light and sunshine?

 

This was taken as an alternate to a photo in my self-portrait 365 project in 2010. It's very similar to the portrait I ended up using, but when going through the archives, this was the photo that stood out to me. In 2010, I was just starting to take photography from snapshots to photographs and looking back at this photo, I don't know that there's anything I would have changed about the composition of this portrait.

 

Happy Thursday everyone.

 

Click "L" to view on a darker background.

almost 3 years ago.... Baby Boy is doing math homework now

He is no longer a baby, but he is still as cute

It is 1995 and the 20B is making its presence known on Marlborough Street. D 689 is seen displaying an outbound working to Ardlea Road, while behind it is a KD on an inbound working to the City Centre. This route served the northern suburbs of Fairview, Donnycarney and Beaumont. The 20B was once just one route that served these areas, along with the 20 and 20A. However over the years these routes fell by the wayside and the 20B outlived them all until 2011 when it was merged with the 14. This created a new cross-city route from Beaumont to Dundrum.

D 689 had a long career in Dublin. It was delivered new to CIE in 1975 and was withdrawn by Dublin Bus in the summer of 1996.

Beside the bus is the offices of Church and General Insurance. This was rebranded in 1999 as Allianz. Finally, the location where the bus is parked became the Marlborough tram stop on the Luas Green Line in 2017. 20/03/1995

It is a trip back to 1995 for the second last Throwback Thursday of 2016. KD 346 is seen on Abbey Street, prior to operating route 22B to Blanchardstown Shopping Centre. This was a bit of an odd route that did not last very long. From Abbey Street it served Berkeley Road, New Cabra Road, Fassaugh Avenue, Navan Road, Castleknock Road and Blanchardstown Shopping Centre. It therefore provided a connection between the latter and Cabra, and was not the most direct route from the city centre to Blanchardstown. Where the bus is parked is now the Luas Red Line, and in fact the connection to the Green Line has gone in at this point. 22/12/1995

This week we are only going back to 1998, but we are at the western extremes of the Dublin Bus network. RA 312 is seen in Maynooth (Co.Kildare) at the 67A terminus. The main 67 route ran between Dublin and Celbridge with a few extensions west to Maynooth, which operated as the 67A. Under Network Direct in November 2010, the 67 and 67A were combined and all departures on the 67 ran to Maynooth via Celbridge. Maynooth is also served by route 66 which had services to the town of Kilcock, further west than Maynooth. However Network Direct in 2010 also removed those workings and both the 66 and 67 now terminate in Maynooth.

RA 312 was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 1996. It was withdrawn by Dublin Bus in 2008 and then bought by Warrington Borough Transport. It remained in service with them until at least 2014.

The ad on the side is for Eircell, which was Eircom's mobile phone network. It was subsequently sold to Vodafone. Maynooth, 07/09/1998

So we have made it to the two hundredth Throwback Thursday and although there are over 50 years between these buses, the photograph was only taken in 2016. SG 30 is seen in Dalkey at the 8 terminus alongside RA 30. The 8 bus route could trace its origins back to the Dublin tram network and for most of its existence connected Dalkey with the City Centre, going via Dun Laoghaire and Blackrock. With the introduction of DART rail services in the mid-1980s, passengers numbers began to drop as the route paralleled the railway line. Dublin Bus cancelled the route in 2001, giving passengers one day's notice, but a successful challenge in the European courts saw the route return in 2005. However it was rerouted slightly, being taken out fo Dun Laoghaire and serving Mounttown Road instead. However it was a short-term return and in 2016 Dublin Bus along with the NTA reorganised the routes around Dun Laoghaire. The 8 was finally withdrawn this time, replaced in part by an extended 111.

SG 30 is seen with the final departure back to Dublin from Dalkey. This bus was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 2014 and is one of over 650 of the type delivered to the city between 2014 and 2019. The buses were built by Wrights in Ballymena, a company which had some difficulty in 2019, but was later taken over.

Preserved RA 30 shadowed the last 8 from Dublin to mark the end of an era. This bus was delivered new to Donnybrook in 1959 before transferring to Clontarf in 1976. It was withdrawn in early 1982 and entered preservation.

On a final note it is no coincidence that SG 30 was out for the last trip with RA 30. RA 30 used to be regular on the 8 when it was in Donnybrook.

Dalkey, 11/11/2016

Storm Chasers 2009. The pre SLR days for me.

For this week we are going back to 2008 and a route that had a short life with Dublin Bus. Route 74 commenced in May 2007 and ran from Stocking Avenue to City Centre via Templeogue and Rathmines. Initially the City Centre terminus was Eden Quay but within a few months it moved to Macken Street down in Dublin's docks. In 2009 it moved again to Britain Quay. The route lasted until December 2011 when it was replaced by the 15 under the Network Direct changes.

This 74 was not the first route 74 to operate in Dublin. The previous one to this was introduced with the opening of The Square Shopping Centre in Tallaght. That route connected the centre with Lucan and was not very successful, lasting less than a year.

AV 317 was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 2003 and withdrawn around 2017 when it was sold to a private operator in Galway.

Finally Suffolk Street was once one of the more busier streets in Dublin for buses but when Luas Cross-City works arrived in the area in January 2015, buses were diverted away and now it is pedestrianised. 01/10/2008

It's 11:22pm where I am, so I just got in my Throwback piccy. This is a picture circa 2009. It was when I fell in love with the skinny jeans and ballet flats. I had not uploaded from this set in several years. I went deep into the vault for this one.

A trip back to the mid-1990s this week. RH 80 is seen turning off Ormond Quay and onto Grattan Bridge. It is operating route 69 from Rathcoole into the City Centre. This is one of the more longer bus routes in Dublin and can trace its origins back to pre-DUTC days. Not only does this route serve Rathcoole but it is only one of the bus routes to Clondalkin village.

RH 100 was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 1991. Once it's career was over with Dublin Bus it went on to work with Swanbrook in Cheltenham.

2018 also saw the hotel behind the bus on Ormond Quay demolished. 06/11/1995

 

Edit: Although the caption says RH 100 further analysis suggests it might be RH 80. RH 100 was not a Conyngham Road bus.

fun photos fro 2015, probably never posted before.

It is 1984 and KC 14 is seen at the 80 terminus on Ormond Quay. This route can trace its history back to the DUTC and even before that. The route ran from the city centre to Clonsilla via Castleknock and Luttrellstown. As the 39 provided a more direct route to Clonsilla, Luttrellstown was often used as the destination on the bus. In 1984 the route was run out of Conyngham Road Garage and ran Monday to Saturday. The route was withdrawn in 1993 when CitySwift started on route 39. By then the 80 was departing from Middle Abbey Street along with the other Navan Road routes. The routing of the 80 has mostly been replaced by a combination of the 37 and 239.

KC 14 was delivered new to Dublin in October 1983.

The building beside the bus was for years the Zanzibar and then Bondi Beach night clubs. With a prime location beside the Ha'penny Bridge, it is now being turned into a hotel. 01/04/1984

It is May 2000 and the Bombardiers are counting down their final months with Dublin Bus. The first AVs went into service in September 2000 (these being the first low-floor double-deckers bought by Dublin Bus) and the final KD ran in December 2000. KD 332 is seen here on Eden Quay with a working on the 56A. It entered service in Dublin in 1983 so had a career of 17 years. Whereas some of the KDs that made it to 2000 got updated blinds with yellow letters/numbers, KD 332 managed to retain white ones to the end.

The 56A connects Dublin city centre with Tallaght, like a number of bus route, but perhaps not in the most direct way. This is reflected in its history of slowly moving its terminus further west over the years. Initially it went to Ballymount when it started in the early 1980s, then Fettercairn and eventually The Square. For a time there was a 56 too, the most recent incarnation linking Dolphin's Barn and The Square. This route was abolished during Network Direct in 2011. Over the years the 56A frequency has also been cut as it parallels the Luas Red Line for a lot of its route. Its most recent claim to fame is that it passes the garage of Go-Ahead Ireland in Ballymount. Eden Quay 03/05/2000

It is 2013 and Grafton Street is still home to a bus stop. AX 639 is seen at the terminus of the 84X prior to departing for Newcastle in County Wicklow. The route was introduced in May 1996, and unlike other Xpresso's, it was an all-day service. It was designed to provide a quicker journey time between Kilcoole / Newcastle and the city centre compared to the more traditional 84. That latter route took a more meandering way to the city going via Bray, Donnybrook and Ballsbridge. In 2012 the 84X terminus was moved from Eden Quay / D'Olier Street to this bus stop on Grafton Street outside Trinity College. This stop was also served by the 11. When Luas Cross City works reached here in January 2014 the 84X relocated it terminus to Hawkins Street.

AX 639 was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 2006 and was allocated to Donnybrook Garage where it remains to this day. 12/12/2013

It is 1996 - the buses are green and there are no trams on Abbey Street. RH 124 is seen parked on Abbey Street between duties on the 37. Prior to the coming of the Luas, Abbey Street was one of the great bus terminii in the city. Buses could be seen parked facing west from the junction of Beresford Place to the junction of Liffey Street, with other buses parked off Strand Street. The northern side of Lower Abbey Street was also used by buses heading east and north-east. With the arrival of the Luas tram line in the early 2000s, buses were removed completely from the southside of Abbey Street. The 37 was relocated to Hawkins Street before moving to its current terminus on Wilton Terrace. The 37 in 2019 runs to Blanchardstown Shopping Centre but back in 1996 it only went as far as Castleknock.

RH 124 was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 1991 and survived in service until August 2005 (which is after the Luas tram system started). Initially sold to Ensign Bus in the UK it was sold the following year to Yahoo.

In the background is the bank operated by TSB. In a sign of where we have come in the last twenty-years, this will reopen in May 2019 as a Wetherspoons. 18/04/1996

Happy memories of some time in Yosemite with my favorite human on the planet.

Another week and another hop back a decade to 2010. Dublin Bus AX 522 is seen departing Hawkins Street with a service on route 51B to Grange Castle. Although the 51 was synonymous with Clondalkin since 1927, the 51B only came into being in 1981. Originally the terminus was Bawnogue but in the 1990s it moved to Dunawley. In 1997 it became a CitySwift route, replacing the 51 as the main bus route to Clondalkin. The business park at Grange Castle became its terminus and remained so until the route was absorbed into the new, cross-city route 13 in October 2011 under the Network Direct revisions.

AX 522 was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 2006. Originally it operated out of Conyngham Road garage, before moving to Ringsend. In 2013 it moved to Donnybrook and it is still there today.

The background has changed substantially over the last three years or so. The Screen Cinema was demolished in 2019, along with College House beside it. Demolition of Hawkins House, which dominates the background, began in 2020. Hawkins Street is also now home to the tram tracks of the Luas Green Line.

05/11/2010

@shimokitamom is asking: Who on #instagram have you #met #IRL? I've met @suziehippy ( and later @syana206 too ) on her first visit to SG and I sometimes meet her when I happen to be in JP ^^

I have also met @jamiest , her ( husband @kedkin ) and @puppychun we actually first met online through Flickr many moons ago then we all switched over to IG xD we met IRL when they came back to visit SG on separate trips xD

I also met @shimokitamom last month in Shimokitazawa (of course!) For the first time :)

I also got to meet @feli_cia who saw my IG post and came to visit on of my flea market booths xD so honoured!

And not forgetting, I met @karissagoh @yehhua @elloeunice @nettetten when they came to pick up their #hamsters from #hesedetanghamstery xD

In the near future I am also hoping to meet @kookysheltie for the very first time when I finally do visit the @nekojam office xD

This has been a serious brain exercise! xD I do apologise if I've left anyone out xD

This #photo is a #throwback to when #horlickstheham and #milodinosaurtheham were still #tiny and slept in piles xD xD

#hamster #ハムスター #hamstagram #petsmagazinesg #pet #pets #hamstar #cute #clubpets #friendsofnekojam

A slightly different Throwback Thursday this time were the bus is not really the primary interest in the photo but rather the background is.

D 533 is seen on Tara Street and is not operating a route. It was delivered new to Phibsboro Garage in 1973 and was withdrawn in 1991. Like a lot of buses in 1988, this has received the Dublin Millennium badge alongside the company name on the side of the bus. Apart from that there is not a lot else to say about the bus.

So why is the background more interesting? Behind the bus is Apollo House. This was built in 1969 and was one of three buildings in the area that were of a similar style. Hawkins House from 1962 and College House from 1974 being the other two. Collectively all three are regarded as some of the worse looking buildings in Dublin. With all three being eight storeys or over, they did dominate the skyline. During the 2000s Apollo House was sold and lay empty for a while. Plans existed for a long time to demolish and redevelop all three buildings but the 2008 recession delayed those plans. Before Christmas 2016 Apollo House was taken over by activists to house some homeless people and to highlight the crisis affecting the country. By early 2017 they were gone and the building was empty again. Finally 2018 demolition began and by August of that year the site was completely flattened. Around the same time Hawkins House was emptied and work began on College House. It seems after all of these decades, the redevelopment is finally happening. 21/09/1988

It is 1998 and RA 280 is seen on Burgh Quay. The bus is dressed for the 44B but more likely on the 44C. The destination shows Ballyogan and that is where the 44C went to. It was effectively a short working of the 44. In contrast the 44B went to Glencullen and not a route that can take double-decker buses all the way.

One thing that can be said for certain is that neither bus route was a CitySwift one. The main CitySwift example operated by Donnybrook Garage was the 46A, which was a very frequent route. By 1998 though the CitySwift brand had become diluted as some branded routes did not match the standards set by earlier routes. Furthermore CitySwift buses started straying onto non-CitySwift routes. Dublin Bus responded by adding branding for the key corridors. "Stillorgan Flyer" was the name given to the 46A route. The branding did not restore the damage done to the CitySwift brand and within a few years both were gone.

The bus was delivered new to Dublin Bus in 1996. Most RAs were withdrawn by 2008. Burgh Quay is no longer a Dublin Bus terminus but rather used by long-distance private operator coaches. 11/04/1998

Phil Boldman was in charge of keeping Conrails Danville secondary clear of snow between Schneider, Indiana and Danville, Illinois. Fortunately, he took shots along the way.

 

This photo is looking south at Kentland, Indiana on January 15th, 1982. This was the area where I took most of my photos as a kid. At left is the house track which for some reason is full of cars. Straight ahead is the signal, US route 24 crossing, the TP&W diamond, Goss street and Allen street. At far right is the old wood bridge over the ditch for the interchange track. The slight bend in the alignment here was always a pain in my ass while watching for the nightly northbound.

 

Snowplowing CR's Danville secondary, formerly NYC's Egyptian Line

January 15th, 1982

Looking south at Kentland, Indiana, MP 61.8

 

I'm closing in on 2 million total views (1,980,463 as of this morning) and began to think of my journey so I thought I'd post a shot from deep within the vault to commemorate.

 

Before 2007, Toni was only a figment of my imagination and did not have a face. 2007 marked the first year that Toni made a full debut including facial pictures; thanks to the new-found support from my wife.

Photo Taken April, 2021.

 

Can anyone ID the Writers?

It's 2008, AV 330 is based at Donnybrook Garage and is operating the 45. This route connected the City Centre to Bray, and for many years was the main bus route to that Wicklow town. When the DART arrived in the 1980s, the railway provided a much quicker journey to the city. The 45 kept going though. It had two termini in Bray, one at Oldcourt and the other on the seafront. This latter one was helpfully referred to as "Esplanade" on the destination displays. The route reached Bray by going via Blackrock and Cabinteely. It was supplemented by route 45A from Dun Laoghaire to Bray. In the early-2000s Dublin Bus introduced the more direct route 145 which used the Stillorgan Road QBC. The 45 became less busy and attempts were made to cut it back from the City Centre by terminating in Ballsbridge. This was unpopular and the route was restored to Merrion Square. However Network Direct saw the end of the route in 2012.

AV 330 is no longer in service with Dublin Bus. D'Olier Sreet 26/04/08

long-long ago deep from the archives once again.

Throwback Thursday: three years ago today I shot this one featuring Delaney at age two. The story behind this shot is here: www.flickr.com/photos/nashworld/4264466912/in/set-7215762...

 

9 Likes on Instagram

 

1 Comments on Instagram:

 

nashworld: Too bad #Instagram doesn't allow hyperlinking of a formatted URL. Missing an opportunity to connect. Oh well, this is the world of Facebook. Sad.

  

Early dawn breaks in Malahide for EV 16 in 2012. It is seen at the The Diamond with a working on the 32A from Dublin. At the time routes 32 and 32B operated along the coast through Baldoyle to Portmarnock. The 32A saw some of those services extended to Malahide, terminating beside the Tennis Club and near the Marina. When Network Direct hit the Howth Road four days later the A and B were abolished and all workings on the 32 were extended to Malahide. 14/11/2012

Teilt die Geschmäcker, Gerüche und Essen eurer Vergangenheit auf Facebook mit uns! Diese Woche geht es bei Throwback Thursday um Mahlzeiten und gemeinsame Festessen!

 

Kramt in euren alten Fotos und postet eure schönsten Bilder mit ordentlich viel Retro-Charme direkt auf Facebook. Dafür den Link zu eurem Foto auf Flickr einfach im Kommentarfeld hinterlassen. Die besten Bilder präsentieren wir dann nächste Woche im Flickr Blog! #TBT

 

(Foto: Cloyne and District Historical Society - flic.kr/p/szipkd)

Since it's Thursday and I recently found this cute picture of me, I thought I could make it a "Throwback Thursday" picture. :)

 

This is probably from 2004-05 when I was about 6 or 7. I had been asking for a Disney Princess doll for ages and one day I got this Ariel for Christmas from my grandparents. Thinking back on it, she was a evil looking Ariel with a weird face and eyebrows, but hey, she was Ariel!!

It is 1998 and KD 318 is on Aston Quay with a 51B. This bus was delivered new to Conyngham Road in 1983 where it spent the rest of its career with Dublin Bus. At this time the bus was coming close to the end of its career after 15 years in service.

The 51B was part of the 51 group of routes (apart from the 51A) that connected Clondalkin with the City Centre. The year this photo was taken the 51B was added to the new CitySwift network, so this bus was a bit out of place on the route. In later years the 51B was extended to Grange Castle until 2011 when it was merged with the 13. It then became a cross-city route connecting Grange Castle with Harristown via the City Centre. Instead of using Aston Quay, the 13 uses Dame Street. 10/01/1998

We grow old when we stop playing. So this #TBT you can rescue your old teddy bears, dolls and cars from the dusty old trunk and share best photos with us.

 

Embrace your inner child and post the Flickr URL in the comment section of our Facebook post or share it in our Twitter Feed (@Flickr #TBT #Toys). We will show our favorites next week in the Flickr Blog.

 

And get to know Flickr Commons! This picture is from the Musée McCord Museum - (flic.kr/p/cCZhwY)

This week we are sort of doing a sequel to Throwback Thursday (204) as we revisit D 756 a month after we last saw it. For December 1988 it was repainted as the Dublin Zoo Santa Bus but it finished its duties on that before the end of the month (and year). After returning very briefly to regular duties it was sent off again to receive a new all-over ad. This time for Pelican House, the Irish blood donation service. D 756 was delivered new to Dublin in 1975 and was withdrawn four years after this photograph was taken, in 1993.

The bus is making its way down O'Connell Street and is passing the Savoy Cinema. On this day it was showing "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" a film that was initially released in the United States in the Summer of 1988. Unlike nowadays, major American releases could take a while to get to these shores. The Savoy is also showing "Cocktail" starring Tom Cruise, another Summer 1988 release.

Beside the cinema is Pizzaland, a chain of restaurants that first opened here in 1976, but closed in the 1990s. 02/01/1989

This Throwback Thursday pic from August 8th 2012 is a mirror pic out shopping somewhere. I was just getting used to a natural presentation then while growing my hair out. I wasn't full time yet and had been on hormones less than three months but I was trying out keeping it real with no wig, bra padding etc. and learning that I didn't need all that to be myself. It will never be perfect whatever I do, but I just have to be me, and it does keep getting better...

 

tammyworld2012.blogspot.com/

It is a trip back to 1999 and Celtic Tiger Ireland, where anything was possible. AD 54 is seen in Parnell Square on the Icon Shuttle. The Icon Centre was opened by Bailey's in Leopardstown Racecourse in April 1999. It was designed to be a tourist attraction in the same vein as the Guinness Storehouse and Jameson Distillery. However, it was far less successful than either of those two. When it closed in 2001 it was attracting 80,000 visitors a year against a target of 200,000. Dublin Bus were contracted to run an hourly shuttle between the city centre and Leopardstown, which had a journey time of 45 minutes.

AD 53 and AD 54 were the two buses dedicated to the route. Both buses were delivered to Dublin Bus in 1994 and operated out of Donnybrook Garage. Both buses lost the Icon wrap around November 2000 and returned to the core Dublin Bus livery.

Parnell Square, 04/10/1999

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