Shannon is a
new town. Spearheaded by
Brendan O'Regan, it was built in the 1960s on reclaimed
marshland alongside
Shannon Airport, along with the Shannon Free Zone
Industrial park. The residential areas were intended as a home for the thousands of workers at the airport, surrounding industries and support services. Population growth was never as fast as planned throughout the first few decades of the town's existence. This was partly due to the proximity of 'friendly' places to live, such as
Ennis town and
Limerick city, or even the nearby village of
Newmarket-on-Fergus. The 'planned' nature of this town did not necessarily result in a successful town. It was lacking in some facilities, and the town's
shopping centre was also designed badly. Shops fronted onto
pedestrian malls that were originally uncovered, allowing estuary winds and rain to strike at shoppers. The early low-cost housing (tower-block
flats located in
Drumgeely, near the airport) was poor-quality
terraced housing. Shannon was originally located in the parish of
Newmarket-on-Fergus in the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Killaloe, and at first a priest in residence of the airport served the population. In 1966
St. Senan's School was opened and Mary Immaculate Church was built on Corrib Drive. On 24 December 1967 the
parish of Shannon was created. For a short period a group of Dominican Sisters of England had a community in the parish. In 1974 they were replaced by the
Sisters of Mercy. The church of Saints John and Paul was opened in Tullyvarraga in 1980. Other churches are the Adoration Chapel in Shannon Town Centre and the Shannon Airport Oratory. The Church of Ireland community is served by the Drumcliffe Union and the Methodist community is served by a lay pastor. Shannon is also home of Christian evangelical churches, Shannon Christian Church and New Life Christian Church.
St. John's Church of Ireland School was the first school established in Shannon in 1962. Christ Church Shannon opened in 1962, also serving members of the reformed faiths, but it is now closed. Shannon was the manufacturing base of
GAC Ireland, which built almost all buses for
CIÉ during its short existence between 1980 and 1986. ==Development==