Dublin Travel Guide

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Sightseeing

Sightseeing Overview
Dublin may not be one of Europe’s most visually stunning cities but what it lacks in aesthetics it more than makes up for with its many attractions. Most of the sights are located south of the River Liffey in a district of gracious Georgian mansions and leafy avenues centred around Grafton Street and elegant St Stephen’s Green. The main landmarks here include Trinity College, the National Museum, Leinster House (the home of the Irish Parliament) and the National Gallery of Ireland.

Near by, The Temple Bar district, once the site of Viking Dublin, has recently reinvented itself. After its promising 1980s resurrection, Temple Bar suffered under the weight of countless British stag and hen nights, scaring off locals and tourists alike. The tourist board and local publicans have since worked hard to deter the worst ravages of the pre-nuptial hordes.

West of Temple Bar, the historic cathedrals, Christ Church and St Patrick’s, both vestiges of Anglo-Norman Dublin, are architecturally impressive. The Norman city walls are on view from neighbouring Cook Street. Dublin Castle, the symbol of the Anglo-Irish Ascendancy, stands proud on Dame Street.

The district of the Liberties lies to the west of St Patrick’s Cathedral and is home to the Guinness Storehouse and brewery, The Irish Museum of Modern Art and Kilmainham Gaol – now a museum recounting the struggle for independence.

The city is bisected by the River Liffey, which flows west to east and is crossed by a number of bridges. These include the famous Ha’Penny Bridge and its new neighbour, the Millennium Bridge, which joins Ormond Quay Lower on the north bank of the Liffey with Wellington Quay on the south bank.

North of the River Liffey the tourist hordes dissolve in a rougher, grittier area, which Roddy Doyle generously summed up as having more ‘soul’ than sights. It contains the General Post Office (GPO), which has a façade pitted with gunfire from the Easter Rising of April 1916; the Dublin Writers Museum, The James Joyce Centre and the Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery of Modern Art. The Custom House and Four Courts rival the Georgian mansions of the south in grandeur, although the Georgian architecture of Merrion Square, Fitzwilliam Square and St Stephen’s Green is well worth admiring. Other noteworthy sights include Phoenix Park to the west, Collin’s Barracks and the sights located along the Grand Canal (the Shaw Birthplace, Irish Jewish Museum and National Print Museum), which loops around the south of the centre.


Tourist Information
Dublin Tourism Centre
Suffolk Street
Tel: (01) 605 7700. Fax: (01) 605 7757.
E-mail: information@dublintourism.ie
Website: www.visitdublin.com

Opening hours: Mon–Sat 0830–1830, Sun 1030–1500 (Jul–Aug); Mon–Sat 0900–1730 (Sep–Jun); all bank holidays 1030–1500.

There are additional tourist information offices located at Dublin Airport; Baggot Street Bridge; Dún Laoghaire Harbour; 14 Upper O’Connell Street and The Square, Tallaght.

Passes
There are no dedicated tourist passes in Dublin.






 
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