Dublin City Council has opened the highly anticipated Clontarf to City Centre (C2CC) walking and cycling route from Howth to Dublin City Centre.
The coastal route connects the Royal Canal Greenway to the East Coast Trail and part of the Tolka Valley Greenway, and the local authority says it provides a “safe, pleasant and continuous segregated walking and cycling route”.
The C2CC project extends 2.7 km from the Clontarf Road / Alfie Byrne Road junction along North Strand Road to Amiens Street at Connolly Station.
The route is part of the Dublin City Council Active Travel Network, a key initiative designed to support Dublin’s growing need for greener transport through improved walking, wheeling, cycling and public transport facilities.
Cllr Naoise Ó Muirí, who was deputising for the Lord Mayor James Geoghegan, described it as “a great scheme for the local community and for the north city which I am proud to have been part of from the very start”.
“ As a local user of the scheme, I am already enjoying a more pleasant and safe walking and cycling environment and a much-improved public domain in Fairview. I have no doubt that more Dubliners and visitors to the city will be drawn towards Fairview and Clontarf, bringing with them more footfall and business for local shops and traders,” Ó Muirí said..
A significant general traffic diversion was necessary to facilitate construction. Dublin City Council said it would like to thank the many stakeholders involved, especially the local community, for their patience and understanding during construction.
Minister for Environment Eamon Ryan welcomed it and said that “just standing here for a minute or two, you can see immediately by the numbers using it that it’s the type of people focused infrastructure that people want”.
“For far too long we have let the car dominate our city and this has been no good for anybody. This is a clear signal that Dublin - just like other leading cities like Paris or London - is moving towards a better, cleaner, and greener future,” he said.
The C2CC Project is a complex public infrastructure project that has delivered 8km of upgraded pedestrian walkways, 6.8km of new cycle lanes, and 5.4km of upgraded bus lanes; with upgrades to nine major junctions and three pedestrian crossings.
In addition, there are two brand new pedestrian crossings connecting Fairview village to the park. Extensive public works have been conducted as part of this project; for instance, replacing 6.5km of century-old water mains and providing a 26km network of utilities for traffic, public lighting and ESB.
The project includes sustainable urban drainage (SUDS) to mitigate against flooding, over 280 new Public Lighting Columns with energy efficient LED fittings, and substantial greening measures including over 100 trees planted and 50 new planted areas, with over 4,600 shrubs and hedges. The streetscape along the route has been significantly enhanced with eight new community plazas.























