- Central location
- Choice of restaurants & bars
- Helpful staff
“A top location, helpful staff and some great gourmet offerings makes this luxurious hotel a joy to visit.”
This is a 5 star hotel in a 5 star spot. Right near the picturesque St Stephen’s Green, the Conrad Dublin has a top location. Overlooking the elegant National Concert Hall and just a short walk to the main shopping streets and must-sees of the city, the hotel is in a prime position for a Dublin break.
Step inside the glass fronted hotel and you’ll find a hotel that is both modern and elegant. Shining marble floors, polished wood columns and comfy lounge areas make for an inviting first impression. And the staff here go out of their way to make your stay enjoyable too, and are on hand to help you with any questions you may have. This 5 star luxury continues to the bedrooms. Kitted out for the discerning business traveller as well as leisure guests, you can be sure of all the mod-cons. And while you might not need to use the workstation, the internet access and telephones might come in useful. Alongside this, pay-per-view TVs, minibars and CD players come as standard.
The hotel is ideally placed for exploring the city, but if you stay in, the Conrad provides some tempting options food-wise. At lunchtime, the Alfie Byrne serves up a large lunch menu in a classic Dublin pub setting. And for something a bit more upmarket, try the Alex Restaurant. With a good range of seafood as well as other seasonal and tasty dishes, you can dine here for breakfast, lunch or dinner. And on the drinking side of things you’re spoilt for choice too. A pint of Guiness in the traditional Alfie Byrne pub, a freshly made cocktail in the Alex Bar or an afternoon coffee in the Lobby Lounge.
- Restaurant
- Bar
- Pub
- Lobby Lounge
- Fitness centre
- Rooms have satellite & pay-per-view TV, minibar, internet access, safety deposit box, trouser press, tea/coffee making facilities & hairdryer
Seafood lovers should check out the menu in the Alex Restaurant
Read more details below
Hotel features
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Meals
- Alex restaurant specialising in seafood
- Alfie Byrnes bar for extensive lunch menu
- Children’s menu available
Other Information
Some facilities may incur extra local charges, please see the A-Z Guide
Tour operator rating
5
Official Rating
5 star
No. of floors
7
No. of lifts
2
No. of rooms
191
Room facilities
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Room facilities
- Satellite & pay-per-view TV
- Air-conditioning/heating
- Internet access
- CD player
- Minibar
- Telephone
- Safety deposit box
- Trouser press
- Iron & board
- Tea & coffee facilities
- Bathrobes & slippers
- Hairdryer
Location
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- In the heart of city centre
- Opposite National Concert Hall
- Around corner from St Stephen’s Green
- 5 minutes’ walk to shopping on Grafton Street
- Museums & galleries nearby
Your guide to
Dublin, Irish Cities
“Warm and welcoming, chic and elegant. Throw in the gift of the gab and Dublin’s roguish charm will bewitch and beguile you…”
It’s been touted as the ‘fair city’ since Molly Malone first appeared on the scene with her cockles and mussels. And for once the blarney rings true. Dublin is an appealing combination of Georgian elegance and 21st-century chic, with stylish restaurants and shopping malls squeezed between olde-worlde pubs. But that’s just the half of it. The people are what make Dublin – and Dubliners – stand out from the crowd. Beguiling and irreverent, welcoming and full of charm. Proud of their impressive literary credentials – the city’s the birthplace of no less than three 20th century Nobel Prizewinners for Literature – but cheeky with it. The warmth and wit of the locals, and their wicked sense of humour, are unique. It’s visitors who wax lyrical about ‘sweet Molly Malone who wheeled her wheelbarrow’ – to the locals she’s just ‘the tart with the cart’! Then there are the sights. Trinity College and Dublin
Castle are the most obvious must-sees, but spare some time for a pint of the black stuff at the Guinness Storehouse. Dublin’s had its share of troubles in the past, though, and you can still see a few scars as a reminder of its turbulent political history. Look carefully on the columns outside the imposing General Post Office and you’ll spot bullet holes dating from the 1916 Easter Rising against British rule. But that’s all firmly in the past. Any hordes now are mostly found heading for the temptations of
Temple Bar. This cobbled enclave is still the first stop for most visitors, and once they’ve got comfy in one of the honest-to-God Irish bars it’s usually their last. One thing’s for sure, Molly Malone may be gone but her Gaelic spirit is alive, alive oh.
More on
Dublin, Irish Cities
More on
Dublin, Irish Cities
It’s been touted as the ‘fair city’ since Molly Malone first appeared on the scene with her cockles and mussels. And for once the blarney rings true. Dublin is an appealing combination of Georgian elegance and 21st-century chic, with stylish restaurants and shopping malls squeezed between olde-worlde pubs. But that’s just the half of it. The people are what make Dublin – and Dubliners – stand out from the crowd. Beguiling and irreverent, welcoming and full of charm. Proud of their impressive literary credentials – the city’s the birthplace of no less than three 20th century Nobel Prizewinners for Literature – but cheeky with it. The warmth and wit of the locals, and their wicked sense of humour, are unique. It’s visitors who wax lyrical about ‘sweet Molly Malone who wheeled her wheelbarrow’ – to the locals she’s just ‘the tart with the cart’! Then there are the sights. Trinity College and Dublin Castle are the most obvious must-sees, but spare some time for a pint of the black stuff at the Guinness Storehouse. Dublin’s had its share of troubles in the past, though, and you can still see a few scars as a reminder of its turbulent political history. Look carefully on the columns outside the imposing General Post Office and you’ll spot bullet holes dating from the 1916 Easter Rising against British rule. But that’s all firmly in the past. Any hordes now are mostly found heading for the temptations of Temple Bar. This cobbled enclave is still the first stop for most visitors, and once they’ve got comfy in one of the honest-to-God Irish bars it’s usually their last. One thing’s for sure, Molly Malone may be gone but her Gaelic spirit is alive, alive oh.
Reviews
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Conrad Dublin reviews - what customers thought
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“A top location, helpful staff and some great gourmet offerings makes this luxurious hotel a joy to visit.”
This is a 5 star hotel in a 5 star spot. Right near the picturesque St Stephen’s Green, the Conrad Dublin has a top location. Overlooking the elegant National Concert Hall and just a short walk to the main shopping streets and must-sees of the city, the hotel is in a prime position for a Dublin break.
Step inside the glass fronted hotel and you’ll find a hotel that is both modern and elegant. Shining marble floors, polished wood columns and comfy lounge areas make for an inviting first impression. And the staff here go out of their way to make your stay enjoyable too, and are on hand to help you with any questions you may have. This 5 star luxury continues to the bedrooms. Kitted out for the discerning business traveller as well as leisure guests, you can be sure of all the mod-cons. And while you might not need to use the workstation, the internet access and telephones might come in useful. Alongside this, pay-per-view TVs, minibars and CD players come as standard.
The hotel is ideally placed for exploring the city, but if you stay in, the Conrad provides some tempting options food-wise. At lunchtime, the Alfie Byrne serves up a large lunch menu in a classic Dublin pub setting. And for something a bit more upmarket, try the Alex Restaurant. With a good range of seafood as well as other seasonal and tasty dishes, you can dine here for breakfast, lunch or dinner. And on the drinking side of things you’re spoilt for choice too. A pint of Guiness in the traditional Alfie Byrne pub, a freshly made cocktail in the Alex Bar or an afternoon coffee in the Lobby Lounge.
- Restaurant
- Bar
- Pub
- Lobby Lounge
- Fitness centre
- Rooms have satellite & pay-per-view TV, minibar, internet access, safety deposit box, trouser press, tea/coffee making facilities & hairdryer
Seafood lovers should check out the menu in the Alex Restaurant