1 acre site subject to planning permission on the outskirts of Ardagh Village.
The site is onto a quiet roadway just 1 km from Ardagh village and 500 meters from the Heritage Centre. There is fibre to the home broadband available on this road, so could be the ideal place to remote work from. Edgeworthstown and the N4 is just 6 mins drive.
Ardagh Village is steeped in history, winning numerous awards including the national tidy town’s award. There is a genuine community feel to the area the village has Lyons’s Pub, Shop & Post Office along with Church, National school and GAA grounds.
Directions
GPS: 53.6643, -7.6787
The site is onto a quiet roadway just 1 km from Ardagh village and 500 meters from the Heritage Centre. There is fibre to the home broadband available on this road, so could be the ideal place to remote work from. Edgeworthstown and the N4 is just 6 mins drive.
Ardagh Village is steeped in history, winning numerous awards including the national tidy town’s award. There is a genuine community feel to the area the village has Lyons’s Pub, Shop & Post Office along with Church, National school and GAA grounds.
Directions
GPS: 53.6643, -7.6787
Ardagh (Irish: Ardach; meaning "high field") is a village about 10 km (6.21 mi) from Longford Town. It is located off the N4 road. It is suggested that Saint Patrick built a church here in the fifth century and installed Saint Mel as bishop. Ardagh's Heritage Centre tracks the history of the village, including its literary associations, which include featuring pseudonymously in Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer, and in a poem by Eavan Boland.
Edgeworthstown railway station is around 9 kilometres distant.