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This is a list of notable restaurant chains in Ireland. Casual dining restaurants ... Dublin. Mao; Milano; Nando's; O'Briens Irish Sandwich Bars; Pizza Hut; T.G.I ...
This page was last edited on 28 January 2024, at 11:56 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud is a restaurant in Dublin, Ireland. It is a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin star each year in the period 1989–1995 and two stars each year from 1996 to present. [1] [2] [3] Egon Ronay Guide awarded the restaurant one star in the period 1983–1985 and 1987. It was mentioned in the Guide in 1988 ...
Liath (Irish:, "grey") is a restaurant in Blackrock, County Dublin, Ireland. [1] It is a fine dining restaurant that was awarded one Michelin star for 2020. [2] It won a second star in 2022. [3] The head chef is Damien Grey. It is the successor to Heron and Grey, which stood on the same site between 2015 and 2019. [4] [5] [6]
The Greenhouse is a restaurant located in Dublin, Ireland. It is a fine dining restaurant that was awarded a Michelin star in 2016 and retained that until 2020, when it received its second star. [2] [3] Head chef of The Greenhouse is the Finn Mikael Viljanen. [4] Owner of The Greenhouse is Dublin restaurateur Eamonn O'Reilly. [5]
Extensive rebuilding transformed it from a medieval fortress to a Georgian palace. No trace of medieval buildings remains above ground level today, with the exception of the great Record Tower (c. 1228 –1230); it is the sole surviving tower of the original fortification, its battlements an early 19th-century addition. [11]
A Picturesque and Descriptive View of the City of Dublin is a set of 25 architectural prints of well-known buildings and views in Dublin, Ireland illustrated by the engraver, watercolourist, and draughtsman James Malton at the end of the 18th century. At the time of drawing in 1791, many of the buildings had been newly constructed and marked a ...
"We frequently went down to the Bank of Ireland, College Green, to watch the 10 a.m. ceremony of "changing the guard," another very colourful daily incident in the life of Dublin. All these things were part of the history of Dublin at that time, and they certainly provided a life, a movement, a colour, entirely unknown to-day." [9]