| Start: |
The Grand Canal at Baggot St |
| Finish: |
St. Stephen's Green |
| Time: |
Allow 2 hours not including interior visits. |
This walk concentrates on many of Dublin's loveliest 18th-century
streets, squares, and landmarks, many of which provide an attractive setting
for the city's cultural and literary attractions. Start your walk at Baggot
Street, by the:
Grand Canal
Built in the 18th century to connect Dublin to the Shannon
River and the Irish midlands, this is a major example of engineering skills
of the period. The towpath on either side of the canal has a rustic character,
with terraces od small brick houses, wildfowl and swans on the water, and
a series of curved 18th-century bridges. At:
- Baggot Street Bridge
Stroll northwest up Baggot Street, which is so named because it is where
Baggotrath Castle stood until the early 19th-century. Continue
up:
- Lower Baggot Street
and you will see perfect specimens of Georgian doorways and homes, turn left
onto Upper Fitzwilliam Street and stroll around:
- Fitzwilliam Square
was built in the 1820s. It was the last and smallest of the great Georgian
squares to be developed, and its park is the only one of it's kind to remain
private, for the use of square residents.
-
Number
Twenty-Nine
is located at 29 Lower Fitzwilliam Street on the corner of Upper Mount Street.
This museum re-creates what a Georgian house looked like. On the other side
of Upper Mount Street is:
- St. Stephen's Church
Also knows as the “Peppercanister Church” because of it's dome's appearance.
Across the street is the east side of:
-
Merrion
Square
Laid out in the 1760's and open to the public this is considered the core
of the best preserved section of Georgian Dublin, it is the3 setting for many
historic and well-tended town houses. Over the years, many were the residences
of Dublin's leading citizens. Walk around the square and you will find plaques
commemorating former residents such as Daniel O'Connell (no. 50); William
Butler Yeats (no. 82); George Russell (no. 84); and Oscar Wilde and his parents
(no.1). If you come during the summer months you will most likely see many
artists selling their paintings along the railings outside the park, as pictured
here. On the west side of Merrion Square are several importing buildings starting
with:
- The National Gallery of Ireland
This purpose-built gallery was opened to the public in 1864. It houses
many excellent exhibits, with more than 2,000 works on display. Although there
is much emphasis on Irish Landscape art and portraits, every major school
of European painting is well represented.
Opening Hours: Monday - Wednesday, Friday & Saturday 10am-5:30pm,
Thursday 10am-8:30pm, Sunday 2-5pm.
Admission: Free.
Next is:
Leinster House – Dáil Éireann - Irish Parliament
This is the back of Dáil Éireann, the fron being on Kildare St. Originally
built for the Duke of Leinster in 1745, the building's Kildare Street façade
resembles that of a large town house. Bought by the Royal Dublin Society in
1815. The government obtained it in 1922 for parliamentary use and bought
the entire building two years later. Visitors can arrange to tour the main
rooms, including the Seanad chamber, and can sit in the public gallery in
the Dáil.
Location: Kildare Street.
Admission: Free.
Telephone: (01) 678 9911
To the left is:
- Natural History Museum
This museum is crammed with antique glass cabinets containing stuffed animals
from around the world. The Irish room on the ground floor holds exhibits on
Irish wildlife. Inside the front door are three huge skeletons of the extinct
giant deer, better known as the "Irish elk". Also on this floor
are shelves stacked with jars of bizarre creatures such as octopuses, leeches
and worms preserved in embalming fluid.
Location: Merrion Square West, beside the National Gallery.
Opening hours: Tuesday-Saturday 10am-5pm, Sunday 2-5pm.
Admission: Free.
Telephone: (01) 677 7444
Fax: (01) 677 7828
This street leads to the north side of:
- St. Stephen's Green
St. Stephen's Green was enclosed in 1664. The 9 hectare (22 acre) park was
laid out in its present form in 1880. Landscaped with flowerbeds, trees, a
fountain and a lake, the green is dotted with memorials to eminent Dubliners.
The 1887 bandstand is still the focal point for free daytime concerts in summer.
Opening hours: Daylight hours.
Along the Green is one of Dublin's landmarks:
- The Shelbourne Hotel (Le Meridien)
This is one of Dublin's finest hotels, which dates back to 1824.
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