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Situated at Dublin Airport, the international 4* Radisson Blu Hotel could not be more conveniently located. A modern property with 229 bedrooms catering for both the leisure and business traveller, 24 Complimentary shuttle service just 3 minutes from the Airport Terminal, 2 minute drive to the M50 motorway, 27 Meeting Rooms, parking for 380 on site and a wide range of versatile Dining options from Potters Restaurant, newly refurbished Departures Lounge and O''Deas Bar. This Hotel was formally The Great Southern Hotel Dublin Airport.
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At the crossroads of Golden Lane and Chancery Lane, in the heart of Dublin, sits the newly-built, elegant and sophisticated Radisson Blu Royal Hotel. The hotel offers a high standard of service and genuine Yes I Can! hospitality. Its location is within walking distance of top city landmarks such as Trinity College, Dublin Castle and the famous Grafton Street, a paradise for all shoppers. Theatres, restaurants and night clubs are also just a few steps away. - The hotel is in the heart of the city centre, close to St. Stephen''s Green, Grafton Street and O''Connell Street - The hotel offers 150 spacious and well-appointed guest rooms including business class rooms, executive suites, one bedroom suites and a presidential suite - Free high-speed and wireless Internet access is available throughout the hotel - Verres en Vers, our French brasserie style dining restaurant and the stylish all day Lounge Sure Bar.
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Built in 1750 the AA 5 star hotel is one of the finest hotels in Dublin & was formerly one of Ireland''s most important historic houses. Set in formal gardens, the hotel has been meticulously restored & adapted to provide luxury accommodation for business & leisure guests. Free broadband.
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Other Rezidor Hotels in Dublin |
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Located in the heart of Smithfield Village "Dublin''s new Cultural Quarter" Park Inn Dublin offers guests modern comfort at affordable prices. The infamous Temple Bar Area and Dublin''s famous shopping streets - Grafton & Henry St are a mere 10 minute walk or 2 minute tram journey from the hotel. With 73 bright & modern bedrooms & a relaxing café bar that serves food daily Park Inn Dublin is the ideal base from which to explore this historic and cosmopolitan city. Park Inn Dublin is 0.5Km from Heuston station and 12km from Dublin International Airport
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Great places to visit in Dublin
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| THE RADISSON SAS ST. HELEN'S HOTEL, DUBLIN |
The Radisson SAS St. Helen's Hotel was formerly one of Ireland's most important historic houses, and has been meticulously restored and adapted to provide 5-Star luxury accommodations with impeccable service.
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| GUINESS STOREHOUSE |
Drink a pint, and celebrate Ireland's favourite brew by going on a journey of the place where Guinness was first brewed. The glass atrium of the Guinness Storehouse is shaped like a pint glass and each floor in the building explores a different aspect of
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| IRISH MUSEUM OF MODERN ART |
An exhibit in its own right, the old Royal Hospital is a fine 17th century building. Once home to wounded soldiers, it has now been converted into a home for permanent and visiting contemporary art exhibitions.
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| TEMPLE BAR |
The cobbled streets between the banks of the Liffey and Dame Street are known as Temple Bar, Dublin's Left Bank, home to scores of cafés, restaurants, pubs and clubs. Many a good weekend has been well and truly lost here.
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| WICKLOW MOUNTAINS |
OK, they are not really high enough to be mountains, but a short trip south of Dublin takes you to another world, that of peat bog, lakes and waterfalls. Enniskerry should be your village of choice and nearby Powerscourt has some of the finest gardens in
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| CHRISTCHURCH CATHEDRAL |
Dublin's oldest building; this stone cathedral was completed in 1240, replacing a wooden one built by the Vikings in 1038. It was completely remodelled in the 1870s after it fell into disrepair.
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| DUBLIN WRITERS' MUSEUM |
Swift, Sheridan, Shaw, Wilde, Yeats, Joyce and Beckett, not the Irish football team without Roy Keane but Dublin's top literary players engagingly presented through their books, letters, portraits and personal effects.
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| THE JAMES JOYCE CENTRE |
2004 is the centenary of Bloomsday, the day Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom took their epic journeys through the Dublin streets in Joyce's Ulysses, and the Centre becomes the focus of the summer-long celebrations of his modern masterpiece.
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| NATIONAL GALLERY |
Opened in 1864, it now houses an extensive collection with paintings from all major European schools. Check out the Yeats Museum and the elegant Shaw Room with its fine portraits.
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| TRINITY COLLEGE LIBRARY |
Founded in 1592 by Queen Elizabeth I, the leafy, cobbled ways of Trinity are immensely beautiful. Pop into the library to see the Book of Kells, the most ornate of Ireland's illuminated manuscripts.
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| ST. MICHAN'S CHURCH |
Dating from 1095, its iron doors lead into the graveyard and through vaults that contain mummified bodies, including a 650-year old one, simply known as the Crusader.
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