place

The Green, Comber

1857 establishments in IrelandComberCricket grounds in Northern IrelandCricket in County DownEngvarB from November 2021
Irish cricket ground stubsNorthern Ireland sports venue stubsSports venues completed in 1857Sports venues in County Down

The Green is a cricket ground in Comber, Northern Ireland and the home of North Down Cricket Club. The ground was established in 1857 and had capacity of 2000 in early days. The two ends are Pavilion End and Mount Alexander End. In 1995, the ground hosted its first List A match when Ireland played Kent in the 1995 Benson & Hedges Cup. In 2005, the ground hosted three further List A matches in the 2005 ICC Trophy, which saw matches between Ireland and Uganda, Bermuda and Uganda, and Namibia and Oman.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Green, Comber (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

The Green, Comber
Castle Lane,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: The Green, ComberContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.553119444444 ° E -5.7488527777778 °
placeShow on map

Address

North Down Cricket Club

Castle Lane
BT23 5DZ
Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Ballybeen
Ballybeen

Ballybeen (from Irish Baile Bín 'Bín's townland'), also known as Ballybeen Housing Estate, is the second-biggest housing estate in Northern Ireland. It is in the village of Dundonald, on the outskirts of east Belfast. It lies within the townlands of Ballybeen and Carrowreagh, between the Newtownards Road and Comber Road. Started in 1963, and mostly completed by 1971, the estate consists of some 2,400 dwellings. Most of the street names are Scottish in origin (Enler and Brooklands being the exception) as the architects who designed the estates layout mostly came from Scotland. It lies within the Borough of Castlereagh and the Belfast East Parliamentary and Assembly constituency. In the 2001 census the area had a population of 9,170.It is mainly a Protestant area, although before 1970 and the onset of The Troubles, about 20 per cent of the population were Catholic. During The Troubles the estate became a loyalist stronghold. Andy Tyrie, Ulster Army Council leader and commander of the Ulster Defence Association in the 1970s, was from the estate.The estate was named after the nearby townland of Ballybeen, home to the Robb family of farmers and landowners. The Robb family house, which then became the Housing Executive offices, was knocked down when the Housing Executive relocated to their new premises at the junction of Robbs road and Church Road in the late 1980s. "Esker", the house that was built to accommodate the growing Robb family still stands today at the junction of Rank road and Church Road. BBC Radio 5 Live personality (and former BBC Radio 1 DJ) Colin Murray lived in the estate for a few years in Enler Park.