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Browns Apartments
89 Lower Gardiner Street, Dublin, Co. Dublin, Ireland

Browns Accommodation offers one and two bedroom apartments that have been finished to the highest standards.

Facilities include solid wooden floors, fully fitted kitchens with granite work tops, washing machines, dish washers, hob/oven, and microwave ovens. Living rooms are very large by apartment standards and have been luxuriously furnished.

Each of the bedrooms have been decorated in neutral colours finished to the highest standards with fittings including memory foam beds, luxurious bed linen, and black out curtains, ensuring tha guests recieve the best possible nights sleep. Guests may also enjoy a relaxing bath or shower in the luxurious marble wet rooms which have been fitted in each apartment.

» Hotel Information

Internet:


No Internet Access Available

Guest Car Parking:


Public parking is available nearby (reservation is not possible) and charges are applicable.

» Hotel Policies

Guest Check-in:


Check-in after 14:00

Guest Check-out:


Check-out before 11:00

Guest Cancellation Policy:


If cancelled up to 2 days before the date of arrival, no fee will be charged; If cancelled later or in case of no-show, the first night's stay will be charged.

Children / Extra Beds:


Extra beds and baby cots are upon request and need to be confirmed by the hotel
Maximum capacity of baby cots in a room is 1
Maximum capacity of extra beds in a room is 1

Pets:


No pets allowed.

Credit Cards:


Browns Apartments accepts the following forms of payment:
Visa, Mastercard, Laser

Browns Apartments accepts Visa Browns Apartments accepts Mastercard Browns Apartments accepts Laser

» Area Information

Dublin is a charming city with welcoming people and a laid back culture. It's also a young city – approximately half of the one and a half million people that live in greater Dublin are under 25. This figure is constantly growing with many of the countryside's younger generation moving to the capital.

Dublin originally began as a Viking trading post called Dubh Linn (Dark Pool), which soon amalgamated with a Celtic settlement called Baile Átha Cliath (Town of the Hurdle Ford) – still the Gaelic name for the city. As most of the early city was built of wood, only the two cathedrals, part of the castle and several churches have survived from before the seventeenth century. The fabric of the city dates essentially from the Georgian period, when the Anglo-Irish gentry began to invest their income in new town houses.

Membership of the European Union has infused money into the city, and you'll see new buildings everywhere. It's the collision of the old, charming Dublin with the new, stylish Dublin that makes it the energetic, cosmopolitan city it is today.

Getting Around
On foot: Dublin is easily explored on foot and as it is relatively flat it won’t take up too much of your energy to do so. The northside’s main thoroughfare is O’Connell Street, the widest street in Europe. To get from here to St Stephen’s Green at the end of Grafton Street, the heart of the south inner city, will take no longer than 15 minutes.

By bus: Dublin’s double-decker buses serve nearly all areas of the city and run between 6.00am and 11.30pm. They are reasonably priced (journeys cost between 95c and €2.35). Although services are curtailed at weekends, there are always buses running regularly enough.

By DART: This train service, with the exception of three city centre stations Pearse, Tara and Connolly, is mainly used to travel to coastal suburbs on the north and south sides of the city. The number of destinations the DART serves is limited but it is a lot quicker than the bus.

By Luas: Dublin’s tram-like network the Luas is the city’s newest mode of public transport. There are two lines – the red and the green line. The red line serves west Dublin while the green line links southern suburbs to the city centre. Both the city’s main train stations and the bus station also have Luas stops.

By taxi: During the day getting a taxi is fairly easy but at night time it can be next to impossible. Taxis are marked with yellow signs on top of the cars and are all metered.

» Important Information

You must check-in with Browns Hotel (same location) for the apartment keys.