Looking for a discount on a Dublin hotel? Why not select from one of the 5 Regency
Hotels conveniently located in Dublin city. Regency Hotels offers hotels close to Dublin
airport and Temple bar at very competitive rates when booked online.
The Parliament Hotel is ideally located in the heart of Dublin City Centre opposite
Dublin Castle, on the doorstep of Temple Bar and just a short walk from Grafton Street,
Trinity College, Stephens Green, Museums, Theatres and Parliament buildings.
The Parliament Hotel brings together all that is best about being in Dublin. Stay here and you'll be right beside Temple Bar, one of the City's most fashionable and exciting districts, and regarded as Ireland's answer to The Left Bank in Paris.
However, "old" Dublin is also close by. The medieval Christ Church Cathedral, the historic Dublin Castle and the world-famous Trinity College are just two minutes walk away. And as for shopping - just take a right at Trinity College and you'll arrive at Grafton Street, Ireland's premier shopping area.
The hotel is an attraction in itself, with its eye catching Edwardian Façade and a
splendidly decorated contemporary interior. There are 63 rooms available, all extremely
comfortable, well-equipped, and very inviting. It also contains a popular bar, the Forum,
which is frequented by both residents and non-residents alike, providing you with a great
opportunity to mingle with Dubliners. Equally convivial is the hotel restaurant, the
Senate Room, which serves mouth-watering international cuisine. Comfort has not been
compromised and service has not been negotiated. The hotel encompasses 210 bedrooms
including 70 executive rooms and two suites. This is a hotel that blends architectural
charm, the main building dates back 200 years, with modern comfort. Conveniently located
on the main route to Dublin's International Airport, the hotel is also very close to Croke
Park Stadium, where Ireland's most skilful sportsmen battle it out with hurl and Gaelic
football for their counties' honour.
The fact that it's just 3km from the city centre means that you also have easy access to
the city's major attractions, including museums, art galleries, pubs, night-clubs and the
very best in shopping.
And now one of Dublin's finest and most diverse theatres is right on the Regency Airport
Hotel's doorstep. From opera and orchestra to gospel and cabaret, and from Roddy Doyle's
'The Woman Who Walked into Doors' to the Saigon Water Puppet Theatre - The Helix stages it
magically.
At the Regency Airport Hotel itself, you can enjoy a delicious meal in the eclectic
Seasons Restaurant, situated in the hotel grounds. This restaurant underwent a complete
update last September, with its name-change reflecting the seasonally of its menu. Within
the hotel, the Shanard Restaurant is dedicated to tour groups staying at the Regency
Airport Hotel, but the friendly Appian Lounge is open to visitors and locals alike.
Why not select one of the Dubliners are fiercely proud of their city, and while DUBLIN is
the Republic of Ireland's capital it is quite apart from, and can be dismissive of, the
rest of the country one Dublin wag once remarked with characteristic caustic humour
that "the only culture outside Dublin is agriculture". Over the past decade, as
young people from rural Ireland and all over Europe, gravitate toward the city to share in
the wealth, not experienced since Dublin's much celebrated Georgian heyday, this
urban/rural divide has started to wane. As a result Dublin exudes the style and confidence
of any cosmopolitan European capital most apparent at night when Dubliners party
with a panache verging on the reckless. Dublin's economic upturn is impacting on the
city's rapidly changing urban landscape too, with restaurants, cafés, bars and clubs
opening in abundance, and Dublin's famous pub scene is now matched by an equally
celebrated club scene. On the downside, however, its reputation as one of the party
capitals of Europe has attracted droves of "alco-tourists" who arrive in the
city for booze-fuelled weekends; they have become such a problem that some areas of the
city, such as Temple Bar, have actually banned stag and hen parties.