cooperguy wrote: » I had a similar thread to this up a while ago about another area and im hoping to repeat it! I am looking at a house in Mervue (near the Dublin Road) and the area seems pretty nice, central and quiet. What do the people of Boards think of Mervue? Would you live there?
antoobrien wrote: » That sounds like the Glenina/New Mervue area (yes it does make a difference). I know people dotted all over both Mervues and Glenina who like it.
cooperguy wrote: » Yes that is the area I'm thinking of. I wouldn't mind if you went in to a little more detail though. The other areas wouldn't be as nice?
Mrs OBumble wrote: » The fact that they make such a distinction between "new" and "old" tells you a little about the mentality of some of the people who live there. Not all of them, mind, but some. Ditto the snarky comment a few posts ago about having to look at Renmore meant it was a "**** view".
antoobrien wrote: » It's nothing to do with the "mentality" it's to do with the relative ages of the two areas, new mervue is a decade or two younger. Hell when "old" Mervue was built, Castlegar was still the parish church.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » The church in "New Mervue" was opening in 1968 according to my contacts. You'd have thought that the two would have blended by now ...
Mrs OBumble wrote: » The fact that they make such a distinction between "new" and "old" tells you a little about the mentality of some of the people who live there.
Vincenzo Witty Swatter wrote: » My friend is a teacher in the primary school in Mervue. It's still a socially disadvantaged area. Some of the stories she tells me about her class are just heartbreaking. I wouldn't live in Mervue (other than Glenina) because it is quite a disadvantaged area and some parts are still quite rough. Renmore, in my opinion, would be a better bet if you are to consider living in that general area.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Not disadvantaged? It's got huge blocks of flats for the elderly in the middle of it. Cope have a day centre there. There's a credit union office there. And a HSE health centre. These folks don't set up shop in areas where there is no disadvantage. Now, it's by no means the poorest or most disadvantaged part of town - but that's because of all the supports that were put into place.
sword of light wrote: » Doesn't anyone want to ask about the Django Unchained link?
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Not disadvantaged? It's got huge blocks of flats for the elderly in the middle of it.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Cope have a day centre there.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » There's a credit union office there.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » And a HSE health centre. These folks don't set up shop in areas where there is no disadvantage.
antoobrien wrote: » You haven't been paying attention to the news for the past couple of years, the plan for the health system is to move towards providing community care.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » I'll look forward to them opening a health-centre in Taylors Hill, then. And a social inclusion service. Seriously lads, it's an area I'd be happy to live in (unlike some parts of Galway). But don't pretend it's without problems, or at least the potential for problems if the strong supports weren't there.
cooperguy wrote: » This thread seems to have sparked a bit of debate! The general leaning seems to be that Glenina and the parts closest to the Dublin road are fine and as you move a bit deeper it gets slightly more disadvantaged.
sword of light wrote: » I'm from Mervue(the furthest part away from Glenina) I know everyone in every house on my street by their first names. (40 houses approx) The people I grew up with all speak fluent Irish because they went to school in Scoil Dara. High majority of them University educated to at least degree level.