Tuesday, 10 December 2013

Joseph Plunkett Tower

Saturday. Beautiful sunny morning. Ballymun. Joseph Plunkett Tower - the last one remaining...
Loaded with cameras and tripods we are going to the second floor of almost empty 15th storey structure.
I am with Jim, who brought me once again into Ballymun and got an access to the Tower. /you can have a look at my previous article related to this place to get a context...link is HERE/
We choose stairs and within no time we are in the front door of one of the three still inhabited flats. 
Doors opens...
Very bright and spacious two bedrooms, large living room with kitchen annex. Nowadays apartments usually not getting even close with size to this one built about 50 years ago. That's the fact.


Living room /fragment/
It's quite warm in there. Half century old underfloor heating still working perfectly. After a while I realized why most of the people who had to leave those flats were so dissapointed. They left behind beautiful memories but also comfortable and secure places. They were surrounded by good neighbours, people who cared, truly friendly and family-like neighbourhood which was mentioned many times by those who had to move away after decades ...

After short conversation with Lisa, owner of the flat, wonderful and very patient person, we took our equipment out of the bags and started to photograph it.
Soon this place will be gone as all original Ballymun flats...
While I was writing this text I got the message from Jim that actually only two families left out of three in Joseph Plunkett Tower...

The Tower consist of 90 flats and was named /as six other/ after the signatories of the 1916 Proclamation. It was build as the last one /1967/ and will be demolished as the last one.

Hall
On the way back we decided to stay a while within the building and record the maze of corridors and staircase on our negative films. Strong light of winter sun was illuminating everything so well... 
Surrounding emptiness and echo bouncing from concrete walls, ceiling and floor was the only strange feeling. It also emphasized mystery of that situation.

Corridor on the ground floor
  
Staircase
Just before we left, on the main gate we've met Bernie Rehill on her way back from shopping /photograph below/. Bernie, retired from Ballymun Library was mentioned third person living in the Tower. She is moving to the new place now.




...How much time left? Months? Weeks? 
Lisa will move probably soon. The same will happen with the last family we had no chance to meet.  I am convinced that these people will find themselves and happiness in new reality. The question is how long it takes...
All of it it's a part of history, disappearing part of history...is it good or bad? 
I am not the one to judge. The future will give the answer.


I would like to thank Lisa for showing us her place, Jim for all his help and companion and also Bernie for posing and great chat. Really appreciate that.


Equipment used:

Sinar F2 large format camera 4x5 with Schneider-Kreuznach Symmar-S 150mm 5.6 lens, Hasselblad 500cm with Distagon 50mm 4 and Planar 80mm 2.8 lenses. Film? Fomapan 100 4x5 exposed at ISO 64, couple of rolls of TMax 400 exposed at 3200 and 1600. 

12 comments:

  1. Sad story, especially as you said, these buildings were a fine example of residential architecture...

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    1. It is sad indeed, especially when you hear all the stories from the good times of Ballymun and also when you can feel how those people are attached to their places...

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  2. wow! You have got a very magic way of saying and showing these to us :) thank you!

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  3. Such History,that keeps growing each day.
    Nice story, and Great Photos Artur, lighting really good, your photos really tell the story.
    Well done!

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    1. Thank you Christina. Those couple of hours I spent in Plunkett Tower were very spacial...I am really glad I could pass what I felt being there.

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  4. Great work! You captured last breath of dying community and their place, this is remarkable!

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    1. Thank you Rafal. It is a difficult moment for most of them indeed but I really hope this is not the end if we are talking about community itself.

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  5. joanna/resident Ballymun18 December 2013 at 14:12

    Dying community I think not. Thriving in their new homes now :) great photos of the place though.

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    1. Thank you Joanna for your comment. I am sure new places will bring them all happiness and piece of mind. Good memories of an old flats with stay with them as well

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  6. These are beautiful images and stories, thank you Artur. Love it!
    :)
    Great work.

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