Dublin Walking Tour 3h45 and 20 audio reviews
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Dublin Walking Tour 3h45 and 20 audio reviews

3 hours 45 minutes

Highlights

  • Recommendations for the best photo opportunities
  • Immediate access to the audioguided circuit, no tickets or materials to collect
  • Offline mode (no data consumption during the visit)
  • Interactive navigation with 3D map to discover the most beautiful streets, squares and neighborhoods
  • 3 languages available: French, English, Spanish

About This Tour

Experience Dublin differently with our exclusive audio tour. Explore the Irish capital at your own pace through an itinerary that reveals its symbols, unusual corners and living soul. Guided by an interactive 3D map and immersive audio commentary, discover the great sights like hidden details that make Dublin charming.

From St Stephen’s Green to the banks of the Liffey, cross Georgian Quarters, Trinity College, Christ Church and St Patrick’s Cathedrals, Temple Bar, Ha’penny Bridge and Dublin Castle.

The app works offline, with real-time geolocation and commentary in French, English and Spanish. Useable on five devices, the circuit forms a flexible loop: start where you want and resume when you want.

What’s Included

  • Recommendations for the best photo opportunities
  • Immediate access to the audioguided circuit, no tickets or materials to collect
  • Offline mode (no data consumption during the visit)
  • Interactive navigation with 3D map to discover the most beautiful streets, squares and neighborhoods
  • 3 languages available: French, English, Spanish
  • Text transcripts of all audio content
  • No deadlines or expirations
  • Admire the hidden gems that lie off the beaten track
  • 20 immersive audio comments along the way (History…)

What’s Not Included

  • Entrance fees to paying establishments along the route (optional)
  • Headphones or headphones (optional)

Itinerary

  1. Slightly scattered throughout the city, as here at the gates of Merrion Square Park, Georgian-style houses are commonplace in Ireland, and even more so in Dublin. Characterized by their sober brick appearance and white windows, these tall 18th-century bourgeois mansions fuel Irish humor enormously. (pass by)
  2. Whether in winter or summer, St Stephen’s Green has no better season to make itself felt. A grazing area until 1663, this peripheral area began to change the following year, when the government fenced off the 9-hectare parcel to become a park. (pass by)
  3. An ideal sanctuary for any self-respecting buyer, Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre is an absolutely gigantic shopping centre. Built on the site of the former Dandelion Point of Sale, where the U2 group gave its first concerts, this shopping mall opened its doors in 1988, with only 4 out of 78 operational stores, on its first day of activity. (pass by)
  4. A sublime example of Victorian architecture, with its characteristic red bricks, George’s Street Arcade has been a very popular venue in Dublin since its opening in 1881. Unlike any other site in the city, this kind of Covered Point of Sale, with a shopping mall trend, is the first of its kind to be built in the capital. (pass by)
  5. A jewel of the city centre, Dublin Castle alone represents an important piece of Dublin’s history. Built in 1204 on a former Viking fort by King John of England, the purpose of this ancient building was to symbolize British rule over Ireland, in other words the Anglo-Norman rule over the Irish people. (pass by)
  6. St Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin, as we see it today, was built in place of an ancient place of worship dating back to the fifth century. Irish accounts say that it was here that St. Patrick baptized several of his disciples in a well, gradually leading Ireland to evangelization. (pass by)
  7. St Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin, as we see it today, was built in place of an ancient place of worship dating back to the fifth century. Irish accounts say that it was here that St. Patrick baptized several of his disciples in a well, gradually leading Ireland to evangelization. (pass by)
  8. Unavoidable on your way, the Dublinia Museum is the perfect place to discover the medieval history of the city. Very popular with tourists for its pleasant cultural offer, the site benefits from a neo-gothic decor of old that immediately sets the tone. (pass by)
  9. An emblematic figure of the medieval heritage of the city, Christ Church Cathedral is a monument that has become a must for history lovers. In order to set the scene, we must first know that a first wooden building was erected on the land in 1038 by Sitric Silkenbeard, king of the Viking colony. (pass by)
  10. O very popular and trendy in Dublin, the Temple Bar area is a must on our tour itinerary. The area was badly known in the 1600s and occupied by artists and traders from 1800 onwards, but it really flourished as early as 1991, with the election of Dublin as European Capital of Culture. (pass by)
  11. Along the popular River Liffey, Dublin offers us no less than 23 bridges to make us travel from one bank to the other. It is true that this leaves us with a choice, even a little too much… Fortunately, the Ha’penny Bridge is here to save you the day. (pass by)
  12. Equivalent to the French Champs-Élysées, O’Connell Street is Dublin’s main artery. Moreover, no matter what time you approach it during the day, this shopping and tourist street is often black with people. (pass by)
  13. Neither crowded nor especially massive, this memorial is a huge part of Dubliners’ lives. Heavily affected by the Great Famine from 1845 to 1849, the Irish people experienced a climate of misery that was arduous, but above all deadly. (pass by)
  14. Berthed along the city’s north dock, this magnificent three-masted is the Jeanie Johnston. Risking prematurely spoiling your enthusiasm, it is good to warn you that no cruise near this naval figure will be offered to you, but rather a paid educational visit on one of the country’s history pages. (pass by)
  15. Stoic on the north shore of the Liffey, the Custom House is the city’s most famous neoclassical building. Designed by James Gandon, one of Dublin’s most renowned architects, the building created a colossal construction site, requiring the participation of all available local workers. (pass by)

Meeting point: We build our circuits in the form of a loop so that you can easily start the tour at the point closest to you, the guidance will adapt automatically. If you are nearby, we recommend an ideal Check-out Point.

Good to Know

  • Service animals allowed
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

This is a private tour. Available in: en, en, fr, fr, es.

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From €5 per person
Duration: 3 hours 45 minutes
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