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St Mark's GAA

1975 establishments in IrelandDublin GAA club stubsGaelic Athletic Association clubs established in 1975Gaelic Athletic Association clubs in South Dublin (county)Gaelic football clubs in South Dublin (county)
Hurling clubs in South Dublin (county)Tallaght

St Mark's is a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in Springfield, Tallaght in South Dublin, Ireland. St Marks won the 2005 Dublin Intermediate A Hurling Championship then went on in 2006 to win the Dublin Senior B Hurling Championship. St Mark's hurlers were promoted to AHL3 in 2018. St Mark's fielded teams at AFL4 in football and AHL3 Hurling in 2019. The hurling team won AHL5 and made it to the Dublin Junior A championship final too in 2017. They also got to the Intermediate Hurling championship Final in 2018, another promotion in AHL4 the same year. The club also caters for Juvenile, Minor and Junior teams in Football, Hurling, Camogie and Ladies Football.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Mark's GAA (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

St Mark's GAA
Fortunestown Lane, South Dublin

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N 53.285469444444 ° E -6.4181527777778 °
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Lidl

Fortunestown Lane
D24 X7FY South Dublin, Fortunestown (Tallaght-Fettercairn ED)
Ireland
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Kiltalown House
Kiltalown House

Kiltalown House is a late 18th / early 19th century Georgian house located in the townland of Kiltalown (Irish: Coillte Leamháin, meaning 'woods of elm' or 'the church of the elms'') near Jobstown in Tallaght, situated at the foot of the Dublin Mountains in Dublin, Ireland. Since 2005, the house has been used by a drug and alcohol rehabilitation organisation as their local community headquarters. The house was built c.1800 at a time when Tallaght was still just a small village on the outskirts of Dublin city, and the lands around it primarily agricultural. The house went through a number of owners through the decades, with the last private owner being a Mr. W. Jolley in early 1987. Around May 1987, the house came into use in a public capacity, possibly as the result of having been purchased by Dublin County Council, and began to be used as a location for counselling services. It suffered dereliction at some point during this transition of ownership, and was damaged by fire in 1988. The house was repaired by FÁS and subsequently used as a base for unemployed people, and then a holistic therapy centre, before being requisitioned as the headquarters of a local drug and alcohol rehabilitation organisation in July 2005, by whom it is still used today. The surviving demesne lands which surround the house have been repurposed as a public park named Kiltalown Park. In 2002, the house was described by architectural historian Michael Fewer as "one of the few smaller country houses around Tallaght to (have) survive(d) the sweeping developments of the 1970s and 1980s".