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Dublin hotels
With a boom in the Irish economy, dozens of hip hotels have arrived on the scene in recent years, but the big news is the stunning restoration of two Victorians. Opened in September 2006, the Dylan (formerly the Hibernian Hotel) was built in 1900 as a nurses' dorm and is now considered Dublin's coolest new sleepover. While the Shelbourne, Dublin's grande dame hotel, where the Irish Constitution was drafted in 1922 in Room 112, finally reopened in spring 2007 following a lengthy upgrade.
As chic as it is elite—designer Terence Conran wouldn't have it any other way—this 139-room hotel has a split personality in terms of view, so be...more
Stranded out in upscale but boring residential Ballsbridge in the Royal Dublin Society Show Grounds, the Canadian überchain's 259-room hotel occupies...more
Stranded out in upscale but boring residential Ballsbridge in the Royal Dublin Society Show Grounds, the Canadian überchain's 197-room hotel occupies a...more
Dublin tends to cherish its in jokes, eccentrics, and landmarks, so when the Shelbourne closed for extensive renovations in 2005, the whole town sulked. This,...more
This 19th century building, a former Allied Irish bank, has been restored and extended to create a 163-room hotel near Grafton Street and Trinity College. The...more










