Dublin hotels -- bad neighborhoods?
#21
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,172
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Loisde,
Everyone receives a free pint at the Giuinness store house....its a part of the tour.
Its good that she enjoyed the place but I think we all feel living in Dublin that you can get the same value in a better neighborhood. Most of these places on Gardiner street etc. are in the Budget category but I feel they are not great for the money. You could get a private room in a hostel and be more central for the same or less.
What I do not like about some of these places is that some just rip people off. I met an Australian a few years back who rented a room with no electricity and nothing but a bed at top price beacuse he ended up not realising it would be a bank holiday in Ireland. This was on on Gardiner Street. I sent him off to a B&B outside Dublin that a relative owned and he was happier and paid a fraction.
People like that should not be allowed to operate in the business and I worry that this is the impression many people will have of Dublin.
Everyone receives a free pint at the Giuinness store house....its a part of the tour.
Its good that she enjoyed the place but I think we all feel living in Dublin that you can get the same value in a better neighborhood. Most of these places on Gardiner street etc. are in the Budget category but I feel they are not great for the money. You could get a private room in a hostel and be more central for the same or less.
What I do not like about some of these places is that some just rip people off. I met an Australian a few years back who rented a room with no electricity and nothing but a bed at top price beacuse he ended up not realising it would be a bank holiday in Ireland. This was on on Gardiner Street. I sent him off to a B&B outside Dublin that a relative owned and he was happier and paid a fraction.
People like that should not be allowed to operate in the business and I worry that this is the impression many people will have of Dublin.
#22
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 1,118
Likes: 0
I've a similar story to Siobhans - 2 friends of ours were coming over to Dublin for a weekend a couple of years ago. At the time we lived in a small one-bed apartment and didn't have space for them to stay with us, so they booked into a "hotel" on Gardiner Street without having asked us what it was like. They had found it in the Golden Pages and it had said A* accommodation, so they presumed it would be OK. I picked them up at the airport and drove them to the hotel. We had one look at the lobby, and Jill had a look at the room - it was cold (in summer!), mouldy, the shower was IN the room, the sheets were dirty...so they managed to get a refund and I brought them to a nice B&B elsewhere. It was slightly more expensive, but 100% better quality!
#25
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 1,118
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A friend of mine was mugged at syringe-point on O'Connell Street and my sister had her mobile phone snatched from her hand while walking down O'Connell Street - so I certainly wouldn't feel safe walking around there at night. During the day it's fine.
#26
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,172
Likes: 0
To be honest as well if you are not from Dublin the petty theives can tell and you would be more of a target in the area. They are starting to renovate the area. It's is fine in the day I go to the Shops etc on Henry street off O'Connell but at night I would never go to a pub around there. You are not local and the crowd would be a bit more inner city. This is coming from a few of us who live in Dublin. I live in the city centre.
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Melissa5
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Sep 27th, 2005 01:58 AM




