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Grafton Street has featured on the Irish edition of the board game Monopoly since the first edition in the 1970s. [65] Dido features a track entitled "Grafton Street" on her album Safe Trip Home. This song is a tribute to Dido's deceased father, who was Irish. [66] Grafton Street is mentioned in Ed Sheeran's song "Galway Girl" on his album ÷ ...
Bewley's Oriental Café on Grafton Street. The company has operated a café on Dublin's Grafton Street since 1927. [3] Sometimes described as a "Dublin landmark" [8] the building shows influence from the Art Deco movement, with its façade decorated with an Egyptian Revival mosaic, a style rare in Dublin.
Lillie's opened in 1991 in the building, 1-2 Adam Court, at the northern end of Grafton Street, formerly occupied by Restaurant Jammet. [4] It was initially owned by Gerry O'Reilly. [5] Christopher and Dave Egan, brothers, bought Lillie's in 1996. [6] A IR£2 million revamp took place in 2000. A fire damaged the building in February 2001. [7]
Anticipated hours of operation are 11 a.m. to midnight on Tuesday and Wednesday; 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. from Thursday to Saturday; and 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Sunday. ... The pair moved to Grafton in 2013 ...
Milwaukee developer Dieter Wegner is moving forward with plans to transform a former brewery on 12th Avenue in Grafton into a community art hub full of creative businesses and residential spaces ...
On the west side, at the top of Grafton Street, is the Stephen's Green Shopping Centre, built in October 1988. It was, at the time, Ireland's largest shopping centre. Its style was intended to represent a conservatory on the side facing the Green and to mirror the brickwork design of the opposing Gaiety Theatre on South King Street.
You can still find accounts paying out more than 10 times the 0.42% national average — up to 5.05% APY with none of the fees, high minimums or stiff penalties that can eat into the interest you ...
The Crown Liquor Saloon, also known as the Crown Bar, is a pub in Great Victoria Street in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Refurbished in 1885, and at least twice since, it is an outstanding example of a Victorian gin palace , and one of Northern Ireland's best-known pubs.