Normanston Close and Ruins
Glasnevin Greenhouse and Lynnbank Park
Normanston Close is the Transcendental Castle's grand west drive entrance and car parking area for all visitors arriving by vehicle.
Fortunately this is one of the more reliably stable areas of the grounds and the least likely to fluctuate between possible alternating realities. This is a considerable boon to the majority of visiting vehicle owners who are largely spared the inconvenience of unwanted mystery and suspense on their way to retrieving whatever vehicles they had arrived in.
The wide steps leading up from the car park form the start of a footpath through the open ruins and grounds of the original Normanston Manor, long since collapsed and overgrown with many varieties of trees and flowers. It is a winding, twisty natural maze of archways, hedges and curious crumbling stonework.
The old house was originally a large family home in the 1800's, with ornate features and a large, distinctive crenelated tower as its most outstanding feature. In the 1930's it was converted into a jewish synagogue as a place of worship in the years prior to its mysterious demise in the mid 1960's.
Much mystery still surrounds this area and its neighbouring estates of Glasnevin and Lynnbank. The majority of occasions of dimensional crossover in this region have tended to reveal more modern developments suggesting that none of these original properties now remain in any alternate realities - which is mysterious enough in itself !
For the Mad Wirral Bohemians, the most preferred, most frequent aspect of this area's appearance is when it is in the identity of the Glasnevin Greenhouse and Lynnbank Park.
The greenhouse is where Lucy likes to spend frequent sunny afternoons with her many rare species of exotic plants and crops - and the park is where they all enjoy occasional sporting activities and games, particularly running races like the Caucus Race and idle pastimes like Frisbee Flying Fall Abouts.