Ballybeen
Ballybeen (from Irish Baile Bín 'Bín's townland'),[1] also known as Ballybeen Housing Estate, is the second-biggest housing estate in Northern Ireland. It is in the village of Dundonald, on the outskirts of east Belfast. It lies within the townlands of Ballybeen and Carrowreagh, between the Newtownards Road and Comber Road. Started in 1963, and mostly completed by 1971, the estate consists of some 2,400 dwellings. Most of the street names are Scottish in origin (Enler and Brooklands being the exception) as the architects who designed the estates layout mostly came from Scotland. It lies within the Borough of Castlereagh and the Belfast East Parliamentary and Assembly constituency. In the 2001 census the area had a population of 9,170.[2]
History
It is mainly a Protestant area, although before 1970 and the onset of The Troubles, about 20 per cent of the population were Catholic.[3] During The Troubles the estate became a loyalist stronghold. Andy Tyrie, Ulster Army Council leader and commander of the Ulster Defence Association in the 1970s, was from the estate.[4]
The estate was named after the nearby townland of Ballybeen, home to the Robb family of farmers and landowners. The Robb family house, a stately home, which then became the Northern Ireland Housing Executive offices, was knocked down when the Housing Executive relocated to their new premises at the junction of Robbs road and Church Road in the late 1980s. The only surviving vestiges of the once-grand gardens are a scattering of mature trees and a handful of structural paths that still trace the original Victorian layout.[5]
"Esker", the house that was built to accommodate the growing Robb family still stands today at the junction of Rank road and Church Road.
The farmland owned by the Robbs is now Ballybeen Housing Estate, which was built in the 1960's when the Robbs sold around 220 to 250 acres of this land in Ballybeen to the Northern Ireland Housing Trust.[6]
This transition marked the evolution of Dundonald from a quiet agricultural outpost into a bustling suburban town. Robbs Road, now a vital thoroughfare, originated as a private access lane for the family farm; its name was officially designated by the Castlereagh Council to honor the Robb family’s long-standing heritage in the area.[7]
Sport
43rd Dundonald F.C, situated in the Ballybeen Sport and Wellbeing Hub on Brooklands Rd play in the Down Area Winter Football League.[8] The sport and wellbeing hub contains facilities such as a 4G pitch, changing rooms, showers etc.[9]
The Ballyoran Community Centre has indoor facilities for Netball, Volleyball, Bowls, 5-a-side football and Basketball. The community centre also features an IFA grade 3G pitch.
Notable residents
- BBC Radio 5 Live personality (and former BBC Radio 1 DJ) Colin Murray lived in the estate for a few years in Enler Park.[10]
- George Cassidy, jazz musician, lead saxophonist in the Regal Accordion and Saxophone Band, and music teacher to Van Morrison lived in Ballybeen in the 1960's in Morven Park.[11]
References
- ^ PlaceNames NI
- ^ Belfast Healthy Cities
- ^ Carr, P.A. The Most Unpretending Of Places (White Row Press Ltd: Dundonald, 1990) pp.214-215
- ^ Young Tigers and Mongrel Foxes, Paddy Harte
- ^ "More memories from 80 years ago of 21st birthday during WWII Blitz". Belfast News Letter. 7 May 2021. Retrieved 23 December 2025.
- ^ "Geograph:: Ballybeen, Dundonald [4 photos] in J4273". www.geograph.ie. Retrieved 23 December 2025.
- ^ Crawford, W.H. (1988). "'The most unpretending of places': a history of Dundonald, County Down. By Peter Carr. Pp 252. Belfast: White Row Press. 1987. £5.95". Irish Historical Studies. 26 (102): 215. doi:10.1017/s0021121400009688. ISSN 0021-1214.
- ^ "Meet the teams". DAWFL. Retrieved 29 January 2025.
- ^ pitchbooking.com https://pitchbooking.com/book/facility/8345b225-1a9f-4548-bbe5-7863a836a285. Retrieved 29 January 2025.
{{cite web}}: Missing or empty|title=(help) - ^ Fame And Shame, Stuart Bailie
- ^ "Funeral Times | Death Notice George CASSIDY". www.funeraltimes.com. Retrieved 29 January 2025.