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Dublin'S TOP: A City Tour..

The document provides recommendations for things to see and do in Dublin, Ireland. It describes 10 attractions, experiences, and activities that are highlights of the city, including free museums and galleries, Dublin Zoo, historic sites like Dublin Castle and Kilmainham Gaol, literary attractions, pubs, Georgian architecture, and Dublin's coastal villages and beaches. The recommendations emphasize that Dublin offers both historic and cultural sights as well as natural beauty and outdoor activities along the coast.

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Mickey Brown
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
119 views2 pages

Dublin'S TOP: A City Tour..

The document provides recommendations for things to see and do in Dublin, Ireland. It describes 10 attractions, experiences, and activities that are highlights of the city, including free museums and galleries, Dublin Zoo, historic sites like Dublin Castle and Kilmainham Gaol, literary attractions, pubs, Georgian architecture, and Dublin's coastal villages and beaches. The recommendations emphasize that Dublin offers both historic and cultural sights as well as natural beauty and outdoor activities along the coast.

Uploaded by

Mickey Brown
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1

HOP ON A CITY TOUR...


Exploring a city is a beautiful thing. Sitting on a bus for two hours not so much. Thats why the Hop-on/Hop-o tours o ered by Dublin Bus and City Sightseeing are such a brainwave. Stopping at multiple attractions around the city (think Dublin Zoo, Trinity College, the Guinness Storehouse), customers are free to hop on and o at their leisure. That means exploring your own interests, at your own pace, in your own sweet way. But theres more. Quality guides are on hand to o er entertainment and insight, multilingual audio commentary is available, kids go free on certain special o ers, and tickets last for 48 hours, meaning you can pick up where you left o the following day. Genius.

1 Take the weight o your feet...

For more info: dublinsightseeing.ie; citysightseeingdublin.ie

DUBLINS TOP 10

ENJOY THE FREEDOM OF THE CITY...

AWARD-WINNING TRAVEL WRITER PL CONGHAILE SELECTS HIS 10 FAVOURITE THINGS TO DO IN DUBLIN

Their contents are priceless, but entry to Dublins top museums and galleries is free. Just think about the possibilities. That means you could skip from bog bodies at The National Museum of Archaeology to canvases by Caravaggio and Jack B Yeats at the National Gallery. You could check out four centuries of furnishings at The National Museum of Decorative Arts and History, before visiting Francis Bacons reconstructed studio at Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane. Seven thousand items were meticulously transplanted here from Reece Mews in London, including books, brushes and, erm, several pairs of corduroy trousers. I feel at home here in this chaos, Bacon once quipped. Its a world of riches that wont cost you a cent.
For more info: museum.ie; nationalgallery.ie; hughlane.ie

VISIT DUBLINS ANIMAL KINGDOM ...


Over a million visitors pass through the gates of Dublin Zoo every year, and there are just as many reasons to join them. Tucked away in Phoenix Park, the zoo is constantly welcoming new arrivals baby gorillas, hippos, rhino and red pandas to name but a few. Adult attractions include Harry, a 40-stone silverback lording it over the Gorilla Rainforest (hes watching you). Habitats range from the sweeping African Plains to a free-ying aviary, a family farm and lots of playgrounds. Modern principles of conservation, education and animal care govern everything and, yes, that includes the humans. The keepers at Dublin Zoo are walking, talking encyclopaedias. Throw them a bone.

2 Millennium wing of the National Gallery

3 Rooooaaaar of the wild in Dublin Zoo

For more info : dublinzoo.ie

PLAY KING OF THE CASTLE...

You want castles and cathedrals? Dublin has you covered. Take Malahide Castle, home to an amazing banqueting hall, a mischievous ghost named Puck and one of the best playgrounds in the country. Take Dublin Castle, dating from 1204AD and still central to the a airs of the nation. A tour of the State Apartments and medieval undercroft is essential here, but dont miss the Chester Beatty Museum and its excellent Silk Road Caf, with Middle Eastern, North African, Mediterranean and vegetarian dishes. Dublin is also unique in boasting two landmark cathedrals within a short walk of each other St Patricks, where author and satirist Jonathan Swift famously served as Dean, and Christ Church, a chandelier of a building containing the bones of Strongbow.
4 Dublin Castle at the heart of the capital For more info: christchurchdublin.ie; stpatrickscathedral.ie; dublincastle.ie

DRINK A DROP OF DUBLIN...


You cant visit Dublin without tasting Guinness. Or better still, go the whole hog at the home of the black stu . The state-of-the-art Guinness Storehouse, located beside the famous brewery at St James Gate, wraps several oors of exhibitions and advertising displays around a pint-shaped atrium. You can even learn how to pour the perfect pint (tip: leave it settle for 119.5 seconds) before drinking in 360-degree views of Dublin from the Gravity Bar. Afterwards, enjoy another drop of Dublin on a tour of the Old Jameson Distillery in Smitheld, where you can learn about the triple distilling process before taking a tutored sup of the nectar itself. Slinte!

5 Triple distilling at Jamesons

For more info: Guinness-storehouse.com; tours.jamesonwhiskey.com

GO TO GAOL ...
Dating from 1796, Kilmainham Gaol was famous as a machine for grinding rogues honest. Or perhaps infamous is a better word the building stands empty today, but its thick walls, grim grafti and foreboding atmosphere still evoke a shiver. Watch out for the striking Victorian wing, where scenes from Michael Collins and The Name of the Father were lmed; an AV presentation and guided tour further tease out the jails place in Irish political and penal history. Robert Emmet, Charles Stuart Parnell and Eamonn de Valera were all imprisoned at Kilmainham, and the leaders of the 1916 Rising were executed by ring squad in the stone-breakers yard. Yikes.
For more info: heritageireland.ie 6 Kilmainham Gaol has stories to tell

BROWSE THE CITY OF WORDS ...

Dublin is one of just ve UNESCO Cities of Literature. The words of Nobel laureates like Yeats, Shaw, Beckett and Heaney echo in its streets. Statues of writers stand in parks; their names have been given to bridges. Visitors can celebrate Joyces Bloomsday, take a literary pub crawl and see the Book of Kells at Trinity College. Literary Dublin is even one of Patricia Shultzs 1,000 Places to See Before You Die. But dont let this tempt you into thinking its all about dead guys. Contemporary writers like Joseph OConnor, Anne Enright and Paul Murray continue to carry the ame, as indeed, do Dubliners themselves, every time they utter the immortal greeting: Whats the story?
For more info : dublincityoiterature.ie 7 Merrion Squares Wilde man muses

POP INTO A PUB...


Theres not much to say ABOUT Dublin pubs that hasnt already been said IN Dublin pubs. These trusty little tabernacles are famous for their creamy pints, cosy snugs and quick-witted craic. Think of Mulligans, Kehoes, Toners or McDaids, all dripping with character, all dotted about the city like time machines. In Dublin, youre never more than 20 paces from a pint, author JP Dunleavy once said. But yesterdays pints of plain are today deliciously diverse. Gastropubs do great grub; hotel bars are shaking up the cocktail scene; quality music, wine and co ee are mixing it up with ip-out fun in Temple Bar. Whatever your taste, theres a Dublin pub for you.
For more info: visitdublin.com 8 Catching up at The Queens in Dalkey 9 Knock, knock on Georgian doors

OPEN DUBLINS DOORS ...


Visit Dublin App for iPhone and Android

Paris has its beaux arts. Dublin has its Georgian streets and squares. Beaming out from beneath their fanlights, these brightly-painted doors are an iconic image of the city. But where did they come from? The answer lies between 1714 and 1830. In this period, four di erent Georges held the throne of England, Dublin entered an era of prosperity, and its medieval streetscape got one hell of a makeover. Grand buildings such as the Custom House, stately spaces such as Stephens Green and sumptuous interiors like those at the Georgian House Museum are just some of the results on view today. Download a Georgian iWalk, and experience the gorgeous eighteenth for yourself.
For more info: visitdublin.com/iwalks

www.visitdublin.com

FREE

Download the FREE Visit Dublin App for iPhone and Android and start discovering Dublin. With access to special offers, audio commentary, augmented reality and many more features the Visit Dublin App is a must have for any visit to Dublin!

10

CITY BY THE SEA ...


With so much to do in the city centre, its easy to forget that Dublin is a city by the sea. But a short ride on the Dart is all it takes to get out along its sparkling necklace of seaside villages and beaches. Within half an hour you could be bobbing along in a small boat on the way to Dalkey Island, eating Michelinstarred food in Malahide, or walking the Victorian pier at Dun Laoghaire. Double that, and you might nd yourself eating snap-fresh seafood in Howth, building sandcastles on Portmarnocks Velvet Strand, or winding your way down wildower-strewn cli paths to White Rock beach in Killiney. Dublin Bay even has its own resident dolphins. How many capital cities can say that?
For more info : irishrail.ie 10 Keep watch for the resident dolphins...

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