“I was lying in my hospital bed and I just kept thinking, ‘God, please don’t let me die. I want to live to see the dump gone,’” says resident Annette Flanagan.
One Man’s Mission to Restore a Lock-Keeper’s Cottage
The old lock-keeper’s cottage on the Royal Canal is empty, with scrawls of graffiti on the walls and missing roof tiles. Willie Whelan has plans to restore it as a hub for outdoor activities.
“Only there, last week, they said I could have it,” says Willie Whelan, pointing at the slipshod structure to our left.
Boarded-up, spray-painted and sprouting with purple buddleia, the old lock-keeper’s cottage at North Strand Road is down at heel.
But Whelan, who is the head of Outdoor Adventure Ireland, has just been given the go-ahead by Waterways Ireland to run sporting activities out of the old house.
Inspecting the exterior of the building, which dates back to the end of the 18th century, he reckons it’ll take some work to get it back to decent condition.
He doesn’t have much money to do it himself, he says. So he’s hoping the public might lend him a hand.
In Need of Renovation
It’s a warm, clear Friday evening at Newcomen Bridge near the north inner city. Whelan sits on the Royal Canal’s first lock. Nearby, in Croke Park, the sound check strikes up for the next day’s U2 concert.
A few months back, Whelan explains, Waterways Ireland started examining the possibility of running activities along the canal. “Just as an off-the-cuff remark, I said, ‘Do you have any buildings around Dublin that you never use?’ ”
Whelan works full-time as an outdoor-adventure instructor, often with at-risk youths. He hopes to both make use of the under-used Royal Canal and expand the outdoor activities available, running kayaking, canoeing, and first-aid courses out of the lock-keeper’s cottage.
“Obviously it needs renovating,” says Whelan, pointing at the cottage’s cracked roof. “I haven’t seen inside yet so it’s hard to know, but I’m assuming it’s going to need a complete doing-up inside, probably new floors, new electrics, plumbing.”
Graffiti stretches from the gable-end to the front of the whitewashed cottage. Below an orange lifebuoy, dangling from a hook, the words “IRISH ON RAMPAGE” are scrawled. The roof is missing several slates. The windows are boarded up. At the back, a small outhouse sits uncovered and exposed.
Back in Use
The lock-keeper’s cottage was probably built at the same time as Newcomen Bridge, in 1795, says John McKeown, regional manager at Waterways Ireland.
Construction of the Royal Canal began in 1790. Córus Iompair Éireann (CIÉ) managed and maintained the waterway until 1986, when Waterways Ireland took charge.
McKeown – who organised the structure’s re-roofing contract in 1995 – says the two-room cottage was occupied by the Lynch family for decades. “They would have kept it to a very high standard,” he says. “People travelled from all parts to see it.”
The cottage’s last occupant, Eddie Lynch, moved out some years ago, and since then it has sat idle and gradually deteriorated.
When people from Waterways Ireland were talking recently with residents from the local community, though, the issue of how to use the old cottage again came up, says McKeown.
“We’ve been trying to engage, both from a fishing point of view, and to raise [the canal] to a new level,” he says.
It’s now over to Willie Whelan and whoever’s willing to help him out to recover the building.
Sara Mason, who works with Whelan as an outdoor-adventure instructor, thinks it’s a great opportunity. The reaction has been amazing, she says.
More the Merrier
Whelan moves excitedly from one end of the lock-keeper’s cottage to the other. He seems to disappear briefly, before popping his head out of buddleia growing at the back.
“As soon as I get the keys for this building I’ll be here all day, every day that I have spare, to get it up,” he says.
In another life, Whelan was an electrician, before turning his hand to adventure therapy. What he needs now, he says, are people with skills. He’s due to get the cottage’s keys at some point this week.
Waterways Ireland haven’t the funds to restore it themselves. Rent charged to Whelan will be offset by any materials he buys for the restoration. “I think they’re going to go easy on me, though” he says.
But the materials needed for the lock-keeper’s cottage revamp won’t come cheap, says Whelan. It needs new windows and new lead for the chimney. The graffiti has to go. The roof needs new slates. There’s no toilet so plumbing and sewerage could be a challenge.
So far, the online reaction to Whelan’s call out for help has bowled him over. He clicks open “The Adventure Project” Facebook page on his phoneand points to some of the comments and offers of help. “People don’t know me! It’s unbelievable. It’s unreal,” he says.
Skilled labour aside, he says, anyone can paint, anyone can sweep, anyone can lift rubbish to a skip. “It’s a beautiful old building. The more the merrier,” says Whelan. “Happy days.”
Between 2023 and late March 2025, the Department of Justice spent over €4.6 million on court cases brought by citizenship seekers, official figures say.