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Dublin Tourist Attractions
Choose from our selection of tourist attractions in dublin county below - to view details on each, just click 'More'
71 tourist attractions in dublin county
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South King Street, Dublin 2, Dublin
Welcome to the Gaiety, the perfect city centre venue for the perfect Dublin night out. The Gaiety theatre offers an ecelctic mix of musical enterainment....
Charlemont House, Parnell Square North, Dublin 2, Dublin
Sir Hugh Lane (1875 - 1915): Hugh Lane was born in Co. Cork on 9 November 1875. His father was from a prominent merchant family in Cork, while his mother Frances Adelaide Persse was from a landed family in Galway. Her sister Augusta Lady Gregory was a close friend of the poet WB Yeats and a founding member of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin. Lane's father, the Rev James William Lane was appointed rector in Redruth, Cornwall so Lane was raised in England. He began his career as an apprentice pai...
Merrion Square West and Clare Street, Dublin 2, Dublin
Established by an Act of Parliament in 1854, the National Gallery first opened its doors to the public in January 1864. At the time of its inauguration there were just 105 paintings in the collection (the first purchase was 15 paintings bought in 1856 in Rome). Today the collection boasts over 2,440 paintings, 5,230 drawings, watercolours and miniatures, 3,066 prints, 331 pieces of sculpture, vestments and object d'art, making it one of the finest collections of European art. Every major Europea...
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35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Dublin

The James Joyce Centre is housed in a beautifully restored Georgian house, built for the Earl of Kenmare in 1784 and magnificently decorated with plasterwork by Michael Stapleton. The Centre includes an exhibition area with computer installations, videos, recreations of period rooms, and items relating to the life and works of James Joyce. Of particular interest are a copy of Joyce’s death mask; the furniture from Paul Léon’s apartment in Paris where Joyce worked on Finn...

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Point Depot, East Link Bridge, North Wall Quay, Dublin 1, Dublin
The O2 Arena is the main port of call for most international artists that visit Dublin.

formerly The Point Theatre....
Phoenix Park, Dublin 8, Dublin
The main entrance to the park is on Parkgate Street in Dublin 7. The Phoenix Park is made up of extensive lawns, tree-lined pathways, nature trails, lakes as well as ornamental gardens. Admission to the park is free and you'll also get the chance to see a deer or two as it's home to a herd of wild deer.
Attractions within the park include Dublin Zoo, the Phoenix Park Visitor Centre, the Wellington Monument, the Papal Cross, which was erected in memory of Pope John Paul II's visit in 19...
Malahide Castle Demesne, Malahide, Dublin
The history of the Talbots of Malahide stretches back virtually unbroken to 1185 when the property was granted to Robert Talbot by Prince John, Lord of Ireland.
The castle is the oldest to be continually inhabited by the same family and, apart from a period during which they were evicted by Cromwell, the Talbots lived there until 1975.
The castle has the only surviving original medieval great hall hung with an impressive collection of family portraits. It is said that 14 Talbot cousins b...
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South William Street, Dublin 2, Dublin
Now an award winning shopping centre this palazzo was built for the 4th Viscount Powerscourt, Richard Wingfield, as a family town house. Of magnificent cut stone the design by Robert Mack was built between 1771 and 1774.
The fine rococo plasterwork in the staircase, hall and salon was executed by Irish stuccodores James McCullough and Michael Reynolds. The bill for the plasterwork in the hall presented in 1765 came to IR106.
Unusally the house and its offices were laid out around a...
The Custom House Quay, Dublin 1, Dublin
The Custom House, designed by the renowned James Gandon, was completed in 1791 and is one of Dublin's finest heritage buildings. It has played a unique role in Dublin's social, economic and political history over the past 200 years.

The Visitor Centre is located in and around the Dome or Clocktower area which contains the most important interior features to have survived the destruction of the building by fire in 1921, during the War of Independence.

The Centre includes a Gando...
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12 Saint Andrews Lane, Dublin 2, Dublin
Andrews Lane host contemporary works, is renowned for putting on modern and sometimes experimental works.

Retractable seating making for varying stage sizes; the seating is comfortable and every one in the house has a view of the stage.
Tourist Attractions
Dublin County
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