The views from the summit are extensive and have attracted visitors for many years. The writer Weston St. John Joyce described the vista thus: "The view from this commanding height, 1,479 feet over sea-level, extends over a vast tract of mountain, sea, and plain, comprising, to the north, the blue waters of
Dublin Bay, with
Clontarf and
Howth, the
Naul or Man-of-War hills, and the
Mourne Mountains; eastward,
Kingstown,
Dalkey, and
Killiney, and then in succession the fertile vale of Shanganagh,
Carrickgollogan,
the Scalp,
Bray Head, the
Sugar Loaves, and the slopes of Prince William's Seat. In clear weather
Holyhead and the Welsh mountains may frequently be discerned,
Snowdon and the
Llanberis Pass being usually the most conspicuous, but occasionally the elongated outline of
Cader Idris may be observed some distance to the right". By way of contrast, Gabriel Beranger said of Three Rock, "The extensive summit of this mountain, the parched ground and its solitude, make it the most awful spot I had ever seen". Three Rock is also traversed by the
Dublin Mountains Way hiking trail that runs between
Shankill and
Tallaght. Several local sports clubs take their name from the mountain such as the
Three Rock Orienteering Club has mapped the area and run
orienteering competitions there since 1981 as well as
Three Rock Rovers Hockey Club (
field hockey) and
Three Rock Rovers association football club. ==History==