Portadown

Portadown is an industrial town historically in County Armagh in Northern Ireland, but since 2015 part of the Armagh-Banbridge-Craigavon District. Its population in 2011 was about 22,000. Its eastern parts are called Craigavon for the new town that was only partially built there.

Understand
Standing at the south tip of Lough Neagh, Portadown was traditionally a linen-processing town that became a transport hub. In 1741 the Newry Canal linked Lough Neagh, Portadown, and the sea below Newry. In the 19th century the Dublin-Belfast railway arrived - the line swings inland through Portadown to avoid the hills south of Belfast. In 1965 construction began for a new town, Craigavon, intended to stretch from Portadown to Lurgan. Some housing estates were built but the project flopped as investment and employment drained from the area, perhaps a blessing in disguise as the design was based on ugly Cumbernauld in Scotland. It also offended potential Catholic residents that the place was named after Lord Craigavon (1871-1940), first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, who sought "a Protestant parliament for a Protestant people".

The sectarian rift deepened during "The Troubles", with a steel wall dividing embittered Catholic and Protestant sections of the community. One local flashpoint was the Drumcree conflict, about the rights of Orange Order parades to bang their drums along a particular route, as they had since 1807 when those districts were farmland and the cows didn't mind, and to continue doing so although (and perhaps especially because) these were now housing estates with a mostly Catholic population. That conflict was dampened by the 1998 Good Friday Agreement between Britain and the Republic of Ireland. The GFA has enabled Belfast and Londonderry to relaunch themselves as destinations, but Portadown in common with the rest of Armagh has not yet done so.

Get in
Portadown is on the A3 Lurgan to Armagh road 30 miles from Belfast just south of the M1.

Trains run every 30 min from Bangor via Belfast (several stations), Lisburn and Lurgan to Portadown, taking an hour from Belfast.

The Enterprise Train runs from Dublin Connolly via Drogheda, Dundalk and Newry to Portadown, 90 min, and continues to Belfast Lanyon Place. There are eight M-Sa and five on Sunday.

is northwest side of town centre.

Goldline Express 251 runs hourly from Belfast Europa bus station via Lurgan to Portadown (40 min) and Armagh. One or two per day continue from Armagh across the border to Monaghan and Cavan.

Ulsterbus 551 runs hourly from Belfast via Lisburn, Moira and Lurgan to Craigavon, 80 min; it doesn't reach Portadown.

Bus 75 runs every couple of hours between Dungannon and Portadown, taking just under an hour. Change at Dungannon for Omagh, Strabane and Cookstown.

Bus 63 takes an hour between Newry and Portadown. There are six M-F and four Sat.

Bus 62 runs from Banbridge via Gifford to Portadown, taking 35 min. It runs M-F hourly and Sa every couple of hours.

Get around
You need wheels to reach Ardress House: Bus 67 Portadown-Dungannon goes that way but only twice a day.

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

National Cycleway 9 runs mostly on-road from Belfast to Lisburn, Craigavon and Portadown then off-road to Scarva and Newry. Route 94 circles Lough Neagh. Route 91 goes all the way cross-country to Armagh, Monaghan and Enniskillen.

See

 * on Dungannon Rd 3 miles northeast of town was a Royal Observer Corps underground lookout and shelter. Here they would monitor the course of a nuclear attack, fill in forms and officially stamp them, and regret the fate of civilians on the surface who hadn't followed official advice on how to "Protect and Survive". Part of a network of 58 bunkers in Northern Ireland, it operated 1958-1991. It became a museum but it's closed as of 2024.
 * : see Lurgan for this lakeside nature reserve.
 * The Argory: see Dungannon for this plush 1824 mansion to the northwest.
 * : see Lurgan for this lakeside nature reserve.
 * The Argory: see Dungannon for this plush 1824 mansion to the northwest.

Do

 * Newry Canal is no longer navigable, but there's a good towpath for walking or cycling. Moneypenny's Lock is a picturesque lock-keeper's house two miles south of town.
 * Omniplex Cinema is on Highfield Rd in Craigavon.
 * Football: Portadown FC were promoted in 2024, so they now play soccer in the NIFL Premiership, the top tier in Northern Ireland. Their stadium is Shamrock Park (capacity 2770) southwest edge of town along Armagh Rd.
 * Annagh United play in the NIFL Championship, the second tier, at tiny BMG stadium (capacity 950).
 * Annagh United play in the NIFL Championship, the second tier, at tiny BMG stadium (capacity 950).

Buy

 * Portadown retail park is Meadows Shopping Centre on the river west bank. Tesco here is open M-Sa 6AM-midnight, Su 1-6PM. It doesn't have fuel.
 * Craigavon retail area is Rushmere Shopping Centre off Central Way.

Eat

 * There's a slew of cheap eateries along High St: Chinese, Indian, pizza, kebabs, the usual.
 * Pot Belly: see Banbridge for this Irish restaurant in a converted mill near Gifford.
 * Pot Belly: see Banbridge for this Irish restaurant in a converted mill near Gifford.
 * Pot Belly: see Banbridge for this Irish restaurant in a converted mill near Gifford.

Drink

 * Near the railway station is Charlie Mckeever's and The Oak. Along High Street are Joe Macs, Jameson's, McConville Bros, Bar Two, Bennett's and West End Bar.
 * Cider is produced by Armagh Cider at Ballinteggart House 3 miles west of town, and at Long Meadow a mile west. They both offer tours.

Connect
As of Aug 2020, the area has good mobile and 4G coverage with EE and O2, but Portadown has some blank spots with Three and Vodafone. 5G has not reached this area.

Go next

 * Belfast: don't just hurry through in transit from the ports, it's a fine city deserving several days to explore.
 * Armagh has long been the ecclesiastic capital of Ireland, with two cathedrals, and a prehistoric "fort" that was clearly a religious centre.
 * Derry, or Londonderry if you prefer, is a fascinating place within historic walls.