Dublin hotel booking guide! Dublin hotel reservations

Dublin hotel guides!

Reserve-Hotel.com » Destination Page » Ireland » Dublin

Dublin Hotels

City Centre SouthCity Centre NorthBallsbridgeClick on an area on the map for information and hotelsClick on an area on the map for information and hotels

Visit Dublin - Of late Dublin has gained a reputation for being a party town where the Guinness never stops flowing. Visit at the weekend and you can well believe it as hordes of happy revellers descend on the city's Temple Bar district, often via ferry from mainland UK, eager to sample the "craic".

But to talk of Dublin as if its sole draw is the offer of a huge night out is to misunderstand the city. Although these elements are undoubtedly part of the experience, the Dublin "craic" is doing as much or as little as you enjoy. Party until late in the night, or absorb endless examples of art and one of the majority changeable histories of any country in Europe - Dublin is one of the majority interesting small cities in the world.

The history, the charming Georgian architecture and the host of more earthy entertainment on offer will all entice you to the place, but it is the people that will leave the biggest impression on you. Elsewhere in Ireland they'll tell you everyone in Dublin is in a hurry, but that reflects on how amazingly slow life is throughout the country. A more laid back approach to life can't exist in any capital in the world, and it is highly contagious.

A nation populated with storytellers, almajority every Dubliner will offer a suggestion on where to go or extra information on where you've been - so much so that you may find you spend more time talking than you do sightseeingeeing. Befriend the right man in one of Dublin's traditional watering holes and you'll find an hour's entertainment for the price of a pint of Guinness - a cliché that, for once, is true.

But even if the only piece of Dublin you see is the inside of one of the city's marvellous pubs it'll be enough to make you instantly love the place, and like the ghost of Molly Malone, you can't help but leave something of your spirit among its streets.