Lagan Canal

Lagan Navigation
McLeave's Lock, which retains its original footbridge and lock keeper's cottage
Map
Specifications
Length44 km (27 miles)
Locks27
Statuspart extant, part destroyed
History
Original ownerLagan Navigation Co
Principal engineerThomas Omer
Date of act1753
Date of first use1763
Date closed1958
Geography
Start pointBelfast
End pointLough Neagh
Lagan Canal
Belfast Harbour
1-3
Locks (3)
Shaws Bridge
Purdysburn River
4-6
Locks (3)
Drumbridge
7
McQuiston’s Lock
M1 motorway
8
Ward’s Lock
Ballyskeagh Bridge
9
Lambeg Lock
Lambeg Bridge
10
Hilden Lock
11
Scott’s Lock
12
Hanna’s Lock
Union Bridge
13
Becky Hogg’s Lock
Ravernet River
Moore's Bridge
14-17
Union Locks (4)
Under M1 motorway
Spencer's Bridge aqueduct
River Lagan
End of motorway section
Moira
Askew Railway Bridge
Broadwater
Flood gates
Aghalee Bridge
19-20
Locks (2)
Sherrin's Bridge
21-26
Locks (6)
Crannagh Bridge
27
Lock
River Bann + Lough Neagh
Upper Bann + Newry Canal
R Blackwater + Ulster Canal

The Lagan Canal was a 44-kilometre (27 mi) canal built to connect Belfast to Lough Neagh. The first section, which is a river navigation, was opened in 1763, and linked Belfast to Lisburn. The second section from Lisburn to Lough Neagh includes a small amount of river navigation, but was largely built as a canal. At its peak it was one of the most successful of the Irish canals,[1] but ultimately it was unable to compete with road and rail transport, and the two sections were closed in 1954 and 1958. The central section from Sprucefield to Moira was destroyed by the construction of the M1 motorway in the 1960s. Responsibility for most of its remains passed first to the Department of Agriculture and then to the Department of Culture, Arts and Leisure, although the section between Aghalee Bridge and Lough Neagh, including the final ten locks, passed into private ownership. There is an active campaign to re-open the canal, including reinstatement of the central section.

  1. ^ "About The Canal". Lagan Navigation Trust. Archived from the original on 27 November 2020. Retrieved 31 December 2011.