Lurgan

Lurgan is a town historically in County Armagh in Northern Ireland - those counties have been abolished as units of government so it's now part of Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon District. In Irish An Lorgain means "the shin", indicating a long low ridge, which affords drier ground for travel and settlement. The town stands near the shore of Lough Neagh, 18 miles southwest of Belfast and is industrial. In 2011 its population was about 25,000.

Understand

 * A fair Town, consisting of 42 Houses, all of which are inhabited with English Families, and the streets all paved clean through also to water Mills, and a Wind Mill, all for corn
 * - William Brownlow, who laid out the town from 1610

The transport route from Belfast to Dublin swings southwest to avoid the Mourne Mountains, so the strip through Moira, Lurgan and Portadown became built-up and industrial from the 17th century. Lurgan was laid out by Brownlow as a "Plantation" settlement from 1610, with characteristic wide streets, and a market and linen trade. The settlers were Protestants, but employment also drew in Catholics moving off the land, especially during the famine years, so Lurgan became an "interface area". It also became part of the commuter-belt for Belfast when the railway arrived. In the late 20th century Lurgan was roiled by "The Troubles", driven as much by collapse of the textile trade as by sectarian differences. A nearby New Town of Craigavon never entirely got built but several of its modern features (such as bicycle paths) infiltrated Lurgan, and Ulster's first motorway arrived.

Get in
Trains run every 30 min from Bangor via Belfast (several stations) and Lisburn to Lurgan (50 min from Belfast) and Portadown.

The Dublin-Belfast Enterprise train doesn't stop here, change at Portadown. is north of town centre along William St.

Goldline Express 251 runs hourly from Belfast Europa station to Lurgan (30 min), Portadown and Armagh. One or two per day continue across the border to Monaghan and Cavan Town.

Goldline Express 261 runs from Belfast Europa station to Lurgan, Dungannon and Enniskillen. It's every two hours M-Sa with only two on Sunday.

Ulsterbus 551 runs hourly from Belfast via Lisburn and Moira to Lurgan, 65 min; it continues to Craigavon and Sprucefield Shopping Centre but doesn't reach Portadown.

By road follow M1 and exit at junction 10.

Get around
Lurgan has a good network of bitumen cycle paths which are in most cases separate to the road network, and link Lurgan to the National Cycle network. These paths also link Lurgan to Lough Neagh, Craigavon Lake and Rushmere Shopping Centre.

Ulsterbus 46 / 47 shuttles between Lurgan, Craigavon and Portadown every 15 min.

See

 * Market Street is very wide, typical for a Plantation-era main street. It's mostly undistinguished low-rise but spare a glance for the Italianate Town Hall, and Shankill Parish Church (Church of Ireland) at the top of the vista.
 * in Lough Neagh became a peninsula when the water level was lowered in 1846. Much of the area is a National Nature Reserve. There are sometimes boat trips along the lough from the marina nearby at Kinnego.
 * is another nature reserve, with RSPB bird hides.
 * is another nature reserve, with RSPB bird hides.

Do

 * Lurgan Park a block east of High St was originally the grounds of Brownlow House. There's a lake with wildfowl, and the park paths are firm going for walkers, runners and cyclists.
 * Lurgan Golf Club is north end of the park. White tees 6311 yards, par 70, round £30.
 * Football: Glenavon FC play soccer in the NIFL (Danske Bank) Premiership, the game's top tier in Northern Ireland. Their stadium is Mourneview Park (capacity 4160) by the hospital south side of town.
 * is the improbable facility one mile north of Lurgan. It's a Dendex surface, all 100 yards of it, so it's really just for kiddy-wink beginners.

Buy

 * Tesco in town centre is open M-Sa 7AM-11PM, Su 1-6PM. There's an ATM; they don't have fuel.

Eat

 * Central eating places include Spanish Nook (Mexican really), Palomo Bistro, Wee Paddy's Bistro and Palm Tree; plus fast-food takeaways.
 * Cafes on main drag include Love Coffee, Truffles and Icons.

Drink

 * Long-established bars are "The Burn" ie Ashburn Hotel (see Sleep), Fa' Joes wine bar and Cellar Bar on Market Street, and The Courthouse and others on "golden mile" from Queen Street to the Lough Road.
 * Ruby Blue Spirits is a microdistillery and gastropub in Moira, midway between Lurgan and Lisburn. They distill potato vodka and fruit liqueurs; tours are available.

Connect
Lurgan has good mobile and 4G coverage from all UK carriers. As of Aug 2020, 5G has not reached this area.

Go next

 * Armagh has long been the ecclesiastic capital of Ireland, with two cathedrals, and a prehistoric "fort" that was clearly a religious centre.
 * Hillsborough is the grand castle, gardens and symbol of power a few miles outside Lisburn.