This is the Kennedys in Drumcondra Village.
I watched a match here in about 2005. That's it. The reason I watched it here will be in the next post, though.
This is the Kennedys in Drumcondra Village.
I watched a match here in about 2005. That's it. The reason I watched it here will be in the next post, though.
This is Dublins other, older genuine Korean pub - meaning that actual Koreans actually eat and drink here, rather than it being a tourist theme pub. Located in and preserving much of a fine old Dublin pub, including its original name board as The Shakespeare, they do decent food here.
They also rescued my football match viewing after N0106 The Metro as-was failed us, as detailed in the previous post in the series.
When I was in this, once, it was still The Metro. I never went back for a reason you'll shortly see
We had been trying to find somewhere showing a football match, which I think may have been Brighton vs Bournemouth on the 09/10/2010 - that's just taken me a good half an hour checking for Sunday early kickoffs in the right era to find - which was a League One match at the time and not a Premier League match as it would have been in the past three seasons!
There were two of us, and two Bournemouth fans who had somehow found the same pub willing to show it - there were bigger sporting events on against it. However, at half time, the barman announced that a regular was coming in who'd "want the golf" and changed over.
Out we went a-wandering, both sets of supporters as one; and found that N0107 Kimchi Hophouse actually had a Sky sub and no other match on, and settled in there instead.
I've been back to the Hophouse, and I'm sure I'll go to MeMa's, but the turfing out rankled enough that I never went back to the Metro!
This is getting published out-of-order, as I had it on my list under a former licence number, and it has since changed.
This sort-of outlet of Whelans took over the location of the former Spy nightclub, which is what this was when I visited it.
Spy was a relatively low-end venue with a rather difficult layout for the DJ box and dancefloor as far as I can remember. I'm fairly sure there's plenty of nights nobody can remember, though, as all you can drink packages were sometimes on offer here.
My Dad's old local when he a: lived in Drumcondra and b: drank - so in excess of 35 years ago at this stage!
This was my preferred of the two pubs near Drumcondra train station for after-work pints, but we ended up splitting with my less-favoured N0080 Quinns unfortunately. I've not been back here for actual pints in quite some time; but there is now a decent off-licence in what used to be the front lounge (I think? Always went out the back to the big screen anyway), which I have used a few times if heading for a train that will leave me home after 10.
This was a regular spot for lunch when doing work in the Bon Secours Hospital just up the hill a bit, and I definitely had a sneaky pint at least once when doing so. I can't really remember very much about it, though.
"Hey! Quinns is closed!" you might say. "It's still on the licence register, and anyway, it was awful enough to make me want to write it up", I'd reply.
In 2006/7, this was on my way to/from work and I was dragged in here for pints occasionally by a colleague who inexplicably didn't like N0082 McGraths down the road. I didn't like Quinns, so it was a trade-off as to who had to suffer each time! Pub smelled bad, crowd was often rough, drink was dear and poor, etc etc.
In 2014, it was temporarily closed for absolutely hideous food safety violations. I felt vindicated.
Its now closed entirely and likely to be knocked for student accommodation, which may use the licence for a licenced restaurant on the ground floor; or may flog it off.
A mate of mine from Brighton (via Derry) used to head here before Ireland football matches in Croke Park; so I'd frequently meet him here, particularly if one of his group needed my second ticket.
I honestly can't remember anything, at all, about the pub other than it being perfectly safe for a bunch of English accented guys in Ireland jerseys. The last Ireland match in Croker was 11 years ago; and I've not been back since
When I visited this, it was the Aurora Cafe Bar, and was a common lunch spot after doing work in the Mater Private or one of the many consultants clinics along Eccles Street. It has now been re-positioned as accommodation with an on-site bar; although I'm sure its still a fine place for a de-stressing pint and panini after fighting recalcitrant software all day. I was last here in 2013 at the latest.
My one visit here was a mistake. It was also still Mother Kellys back then.
Mother Kellys had quite the reputation. A local nickname of "The Pharmacy" applied, due to the apparent ease of getting certain possibly prescription products there.
I had been in N0006 Brew Dock, but wished to watch a football match - and Brew Dock only has terrestrial TV which is rarely used (you may not notice it at all - there's a projector upstairs and they put more TVs during the Euros). I decided to go up to Talbot Street rather than the potentially much safer idea of trying N0041 Robert Reades as-was and ended up in Mother Kellys
The pub was being 'run', to some level, by a single bar woman. She managed to remember, and indeed pour my round on the second go before I'd even got to the bar; and also managed to eject someone who was going around the pub trying to sell a single, presumably shoplifted, bottle of Smirnoff to patrons.
Between the absolute headbanger status of most of the clientele, the guy trying to sell vodka with his reason of "I've just got out of the Joy and need money"; and the inch deep of 'water' (read: piss) on the floor of the toilets I should have bailed at half time - except due to the remembered order I actually had three pints in front of me, as the mate I was with had accidentally got a round also while I was wading through the mire downstairs.
Never again. I popped my head in to the refurbished and renamed 74 Talbot, and on seeing a similar crowd and not one of the promised "craft beers" - engraved on the windows - on the taps, I left.
Grainger is one of the more common surnames above the door of Dublin pubs; and unlike, say, Madigans - they don't appear to all be the same person/family. I'd imagine someone out there knows the relation between them all; if there is one that is.
When I first started going to this Graingers, it was a very traditional Dublin city centre pub; very convenient to Connolly Station and often very quiet. I've never failed to get a seat here.
Over time, it has had some work done and is now primarily a craft beer bar; although some of the regulars seem to have stayed; and while its probably a bit busier at the times I'd usually end up there; its still possible to get a seat.
Its a big concert venue and the drinks dear & crap. I've been lots; including before it was rebuilt - the old series licence number shows its carried over from then.
Another of my frequent locations, being sort-of near work and matching what I want in terms of beer and food. This is one of the smaller Galway Bay bars but still manages 24 taps and the normal food menu.
Like many Galway Bay pubs, this had a bit of a mixed history prior to them taking it on - it was an early house, went through multiple name changes and ended up closed; but has thrived with the GBB format.
Craft competition has popped up nearby over the years, with 1013149 Urban Brewing opening up and N0053 Grainers re-targetting; but it has held its own.
I've noticed that because I usually write up a specific visit; some of the shorter posts in this series are for pubs I visit a lot!
In the UK, railway station pubs usually slot in to two categories - boring or beautiful. In Dublin we get original yet still quite boring, we get bonkers, forced twee and sort-of beautiful in this case. Externally, there is little or nothing appealing to the pub in Connolly; but inside Madigans you get to see quite a bit of the 1840s railway architechture; some of it lit quite nicely from memory.
Memory here isn't the best though, as while I was here relatively recently; like all visits to in-station pubs it was very quick - 29 minutes for a train due to just missing one. By the time of the evening my trains go to hourly, the pub is closed so its Graingers across the road for any 59 minute waits.
Another gig venue, and one I haven't been back to that much recently - for some reason bands I go see have mostly moved to the Olympia it seems.
This has a theatre licence, but now also operates a standard bar under somewhat disputed conditions.
This premises has undergone a vast and hopefully temporary rework to enable it to operate more viably under COVID restrictions; and I haven't been in since - or for some years actually - so I can't reflect current realities here.
Back in t'day, when I were a lad... or March, and its normally known, the Market Bar was a vast open plan pub/restaurant known for its rather odd acoustics and its resultant ability to be EXCEPTIONALLY LOUD despite having no music playing. It is in an old market, or at least part of it - the bulk of the South City Markets still operates as the Georges Street Arcade, in to which there is (normally, anyway) a secondary entrance to the bar.
This is a Korean bar - one that's actually drunk in by Koreans, albeit that's not unique in Dublin - in a fine listed building; namely a former excise stores. Originally opened as a modern bar called Excise, which I have a very vague feeling I may have drunk in in about 2006; I've definitely been here quite a few times since it opened under its current guise in about 2014.
The floor levels in here are somewhat confusing; due to the preservation of parts of the listed building it is in - the main street facing entrance is up steps, with the bar then down steps back to much the same level as the street! From memory, last time I went in here the drink selection was all Heineken Ireland and missing the more drinkable options at that, but that was a few months ago.
When I worked a bit closer, I was a very frequent customer of the take out / fast food part of the business, which operates as "Mix & Mix" from one of the modern extensions of the building. There is also a more conventional restaurant above this and back in to the upper floor of the original building; which uses a call bell system to call wait staff to your table - something I've not seen anywhere else.
I recently wrote about my first visit to the other pub-licenced 1010212 Yamamori on Georges Street which describes this place relatively well.
There is more of a bar setup here; as well as a nightclub and obviously, the restaurant. Have the chicken katsu, its better than you'll make yourself.
As with the other distillery tours in Dublin, a full pub licence provides flexibility here - although currently, you get your tasting on the tour and a single sample or cocktail afterwards; with table service to tables scattered around the extensive bar area.
Now is a good time to go on the various distillery tours - in the case of Jameson, everything has been spaced out to provide social distancing, and while numbers are heavily limited it is very likely you can same-day tickets.
I've been here countless times before; the most recent in mid-February. I've been here as Judge Roy Beans (underage - its totally new operators since 2004!), I've been to the nightclub as Lillies. I've been to the Dingle Whiskey Bar that shares the licence. Its nowhere near the most frequently visited pub for me, but it would be hard to even try remember every time.
The Porterhouse provided Dublin's earliest craft beer bars and that's the main offering on the ground floor; along with a restaurant area at the back offering fairly decent conventional pub grub. The whiskey bar next door has a huge selection, including their own Dingle products but also a near complete set of current Scotch distilleries.
The nightclub on the upper floors has relatively recently been relaunched as Lost Lane; having been the infamous Lillies Bordello prior to this. Lillies, with its members only Library bar, bottle service and so on attracted an odd if varied crowd. I somehow ended up here one night from the rather other-end-of-the-scale Sin in Temple Bar; and another night when my employer decided it would make a good Christmas party venue for some reason. Its website is still up, for now; if you want a look back in time to what was one of the last vestitages of 1990s/pre-crash 00s Ireland.
This is the catch-all licence for some of the bars in T1 in the Airport; primarily the one allll the way down in Ryanair-land which is the most likely one you'll have used.
There is a proper bar and restaurant here; on the upper floor of the terminal building. Its not bad, but its an irritating walk to the bus stop afterwards so maybe get a taxi - its not like you'll be flying out, unless you're very wealthy of course.
I haven't been here since it rebranded (from The Wright Venue); and indeed I haven't drunk here in ages, but I have and that's what matters for the list!
This is borderline to include really; as it is a passenger vessel - a boat - not a land based premises. There is a pub on a boat, namely The Boat, but its permanently moored; and the St Bridget is definitely afloat
This is the Dublin Bay Cruises vessel, from which I've done a Halloween special broadcast for work, as well as attended a The Original Rudeboys gig in Dublin Bay which we organised.
There is a small but functional bar on board the boat. The trip out into Dublin Bay is amazing in good weather and well worth a go.
I had a fairly poor Christmas party here - in terms of atmosphere and attendance more than anything else - and don't massively remember much else about it. Wouldn't be my type of place to go to, normally. But I've drunk there, so it counts.
Its hard to say whether this was the first of the fancier cocktail bars in Dublin, but its likely to be up there - although it isn't the first licenced premises in its location; Pal Joey having been there previously. In the Pal Joey era, it had a ground floor - now, you enter via a door to the stairs, having to buzz in as if its a speakeasy... which, as it holds a conventional publicans licence, it by definition is not
That prohibition era vibe is what they're going for; and have mostly managed to get. The prices are rather on the steep side and that's likely why I haven't been back in about five years!
The place that (sort of) started it all for Press Up's bar stereotypes; the once hipster mecca, and somewhere I've not actually been in quite a while. The licence also covers Bison Bar, which is linked upstairs; and is a bit of an oddity in that regard as Press Up have multiple licences in this overall structure for their different units.
I've probably been to Bison more often than the Workman's itself; as its directly beside a bus stop home and quite conducive to leaping in for a pint when you see over 20 minutes on the screen; although since the off-peak bus services were increased a few years back this has really died off.
The Workman's was what it says it is - its the former City of Dublin Working Men's Club; the club itself having moved to Strand Street Little in 2003; where it was still operational in 2017; but I think may have closed since, as the building was up for sale in Summer 2019. There ever very few ever of this type of club in Ireland, and even fewer still operate.
They've kept some of the interiors from that era, giving possibly the most genuine atmosphere of any of the modern Press Up locations - the original S2119 Captain Americas also has its charm, but they bought it.
Bison is a lot newer, not being a former sort-of-pub; and is more food focused.
I'd never noticed how so many of the places at the lower end of the register weren't "really" pubs before. Two stadiums and a conference centre in the first bundle of posts is a bit excessive but it doesn't leave many more of the same to do
I've not been to Croke Park as often as the Aviva; but I have been to at least one gig here at which I had rather crappy stadium pints; and I'm fairly sure I had more at the 2007 League Final too.
This is the catch-all licence for the Select Service Partner operated bars in Dublin Airport T2; and the Budweiser tap in the Burger King... if you've had a pint that you paid for in T2, this is probably the licence you hit - the DAA licence covers mostly duty free and the lounge.
No, this isn't some existential post about what makes a somewhere feel like a pub in someones mind (just go read The Moon Under Water for that); its what is the legal definition. Currently, the LVA are trying to claim that somewhere that looks like a pub and acts like a pub is "not a pub". They've said this about fifty times so far today on Twitter, trying to create some division between licence classes in peoples minds.
On this blog, I accept the following licence types as pubs:
I would also accept the Early Closing variants of the 6- and 7-day licences and the Omnibus Station Licence if these ever appeared in Dublin again.
Its very, very easy to argue that the first 6 categories shouldn't count; and I wouldn't even bother arguing about it; nor would I bother arguing in favour of the single racecourse licence - seeing as Leopardstown actually has conventional licences anyway.
However, the LVA are now repeatedly claiming that a pub that holds a Theatre licence is "not a pub", and has even doubled down with a claim that they don't represent hotel bars; which I find exceptionally spurious.
We don’t represent them.That venue is not a pub and does not hold a pub licence. We don’t represent them just as we don’t represent other places serving alcohol like hotel bars, restaurants, theatres, shebeens etc
— LVA (@LVADublinPubs) August 16, 2020
The LVA has a committee member who represents a hotel chain; with no non-hotel licences that I am aware of it. The Irish Pub Awards, which they co-organise, gave its 2017 Dublin region Best Music Pub award to S3207 Darkey Kellys (hrm, that's probably the shortest positive write-up I've ever written).
If you exclude theatres from your idea of "a pub" in Dublin, you lose not only Berlin but also 1001735 RIOT, the Wild Duck in Temple Bar, 1005429 Barts on South William Street and a number of other places that are clearly Not Theatres Or Restaurants, which is what the LVA are trying to batter down on Berlin being.
If you exclude hotels, as I don't think they actually do except when further digging down on an argument, the list of places that basically everyone else thinks of as pubs rockets. Would you exclude the Library Bar from Dublin's pubs? Its on the licence of the Central Hotel, S3099.
PMacs Drury Street is on a hotel licence. The Gasworks is on a hotel licence. The now closed Alfie Byrnes was on a hotel licence. All the various bits of the Mercantile complex are on a hotel licence. There's over 120 hotel licences in Dublin and about a quarter of them have bars that would be considered pubs by basically everyone
The LVA could very easily have just condemned the scenes in Berlin and pointed out that other operators are not doing it - instead they've spent an entire day trying to insist it isn't a pub as if this somehow changes the situation instead; which I simply cannot understand. Throwing the hotel bar sector under the bus is particularly strange too.
Pacinos restaurant on Suffolk Street has two sort-of secret additions, the Blind Pig in the basement and the Little Pig not-in-the-basement (well, someone else has already said its upstairs). Both are reservation required; and both have convoluted entry procedures - the linked article gives away the Blind Pig one but we went to the Little Pig; which is even more convoluted and which you can find out for yourself if you go.
Its a fully pub licenced premises, so I would assume that in ordinary times you can just go for cocktails; however at the time of visiting, food was not optional. Our 2215 sitting would also be impossible now, but the regulations had not been hardened by then.
The offering here is the quite common Prohibition-era style cocktail bar. Considering Prohibition era cocktails were devised to hide unpalatable bootleg spirits; and all the Dublin ones aping that style use good quality ingredients, any attempt at authenticity is gone from the start, but they go deep here to try and keep it feeling era-appropriate. There is an antique pull-handled toilet with no cistern siphon in the gents, so you need to pull multiple times to get a flush, for instance.
Its a small room and the available space for customers has been further reduced to allow for distancing, with tables moved appropriately apart and some new permanent fixtures at the bar to stop it being used
The cocktails we had - its a few weeks ago now, so I can't remember all of them, but they included an Aviation and a Sazerac - were all well made and the required accompanying meal was very good; and while it met the 'substantial meal' rules, was not like having to eat a carvery at 11pm.
In the circumstances, this was a very satisfactory end to the evening and I'll willingly return - when I'm allowed out of the county maybe!
One of the last hotels built before the late 2010s economic crash, and with a rock/guitar theme to match its location right behind the 3Arena; this is very near where I work, so I've been in quite a bit. Its also where a different employer had their Christmas parties and where some friends married, so my visits here have been multitude.
The main thing to note here is that food service is usually a tad on the slow side; but the food is good and the staff have always been exceptionally accommodating - particularly with the wedding I attended there. Its one of a limited number of Dublin hotels I've actually stayed in, too.
This is a catch-all licence for any facilities run or owned by the DAA in T2 that serve alcohol, such as any concession stands in their duty free, some of the bars and the generic lounge.
As far as I can tell, the way the licencing works is that each operator - DAA, SSP, Wrights etc - needs a licence for each building - T1, T2, the carpark structure, the south boarding pier - that they use. This means that there are quite a few licences in the airport. They aren't pub licences as such, as you can get new ones generated without cancelling and old one; and I'm never quite sure whether to count them or not - but the old arrivals bar in T1 was certainly considered to be a "proper pub" by many; but a fridge with a few bottles in what is basically a huge portakabin is about as low as it gets
I haven't actually visited this as RIOT; but only in its prior incarnation as the Gypsy Rose. This was a regular spot after gigs in the Button Factory or the Academy; but for whatever reason in gig scheduling, all I've gone to recently have been in Whelans (which becomes its own after-gig spot) or the Olympia, which drives me towards Georges Street instead.
What you got back then - a rock bar. If you've been in one you've been in them all I'd say.
To drink at the Aviva, you can go to a concert; or a rugby match; or for the posh seats at a football match - and if its a UEFA controlled match, don't expect to actually see the game with your pint. Which won't be great either.
Multiple FAI Cup finals in Premium (you used to get this automatically with a FAI season ticket; I no longer have one but I got used to the cushioned seat!), and one Champions League Qualifier for which I can't quite remember how a Premium ticket was obtained make up the times I've drunk here; but I've been to a decent amount of other games in normal tiers.
Its a Diageo shop, which dictates what drinks you can get. There isn't really much else to say.
I've been here a vast number of times, as a gig venue; to the level that I'm not quite sure I could actually count it out. Hitting a sweet spot in venue sizes, and with not that many venues bigger until you hit 3Arena or outdoor arena sizes, its a permanent fixture on the touring schedules for mid-popularity brands and also the regular home of charity events.
Unlike the other gig venues, it's actually famed for its drinking facilities - all the bars on all floors are quite special in terms of design; but Maureens Bar is the best known, as it is still watched over by the now approximately 95 year old Maureen Grant, who has worked at the theatre since 1949.
As an old building, its been through quite a lot; including being saved from conversion to a dance hall by the then new planning laws in 1963, the collapse of the main arch in 1974, leading to a three year closure; and then its canopy being severely damaged by a truck in 2004. Both have been restored to their original glory and there are minor restoration works underway pretty much all the time to keep it going in decent condition.
I quite like this as a gig venue; although the Heineken Ireland products only bars do rather dampen the drinking experience!
A few of the now defunct Alltech beer festivals make up the entirety of the times I've entered the building that currently houses the Dáil. I'm unsure as to whether there is a bar operating here for the TDs; but a members bar doesn't need a publicans licence; hence why the normal Dáil bar is never going to appear here.
I live in Kildare, not Dublin; which means that for the next two weeks (at least), there'll be no further pub visits for me. I do actually have a few from two weeks ago that are not yet written up, and will appear in the next few days, but I've been intending to do what this post starts for some time now...
At the start of this project, I figured out that I had already drunk in about 130 pubs; which I marked off the now much abused spreadsheet I've used to keep track of where I am with the project. As Revenue updates came in, or pubs reopened - or, in a few cases, I had a sudden remembrance of a long-lost night out - a few further pubs have been marked off as previously visited.
I want to eventually be able to link to every pub's post when mentioned, which means I need to write up these 130 or so reviews. Some are going to be particularly abrupt; and if I ever get around to doing the small number that were closed prior to the Revenue open data era there's going to be at least one "I know I was here, but I can't remember a thing" - for Polly Hops in Newcastle.
I'll be going in the order my spreadsheet has them in, which is number order; so what better place to start than with the lowest numbered pub in Dublin - The Green Room on Sheriff Street.
This pub is part of the Liffey Trust complex of apartments, studios, offices and kitchens; which replaced a former equivalent, destroyed by fire in 2002. As the old building was apparently uninsured, I must assume the rebuild was funded by the apartments which the previous setup didn't have.
This is very near to where I work; and was one of the few places doing lunches when I started working there; so I've been a fairly frequent visitor for that, and also the occasional drinks before going to something in the 3Arena or the Gibson. However, since the opening of 1015426 Rubys, I've rarely been back, the reason for which will become clear.
The pub has its normal sized area, which is what is open regularly for lunchtime trade as well as its locals; some of whom even have customised bar stools; and a significantly larger area and second bar which I have only ever seen open for major gigs in the 3Arena.
Its fine as a drinking pub; but I've never liked the food (excepting for one day there was a BBQ in the smoking area, actually); and Rubys food is both better and cheaper so the majority of my business has moved. It should be fine from its locals and gig trade once this comes back to normal; though.
Very small licence update this month - only 4 rows are even touched - but there's something interesting
Reapperances
N2805 Krewe, Capel Street - this licence which was formerly Seven Stars karaoke bar had been off the register for some years, and the bar closed and derelict. Reopened in December 2019, which shows how long it can take for the register to reflect reality.
Thank you. 🤩 No license unfortunately 😕
— Dublin Loves Bikes (@dlbcycles) February 16, 2021
In April 2021, the closure of N1195 Clifton Court Hotel and Lanigans Pub was confirmed on Instagram by the operators. There has been a hotel on this site for well over 100 years, so hopefully something can reopen in the future
Today in Unfortunate Dublin Pub News, apparently they want to make the shuttered Mayes a Centra - possibly keeping the Guinness sign/clock? https://t.co/zlB79Yk9p0 pic.twitter.com/4CR2JjUcZw
— Lisa Grimm (@lisagrimm) May 30, 2022
N1066 Bachelor Inn never reopened, and was placed for sale in September 2022. I don't think the Fitzgerald Group were operating this before it closed, perhaps it was leased out?
There are a number of other pubs which have not reopened but which there is nothing to indicate any direction as to what's happening - many are still licenced, no works have been done to the premises, they have not been advertised for sale etc. There are other premises which have closed for redevelopment but will reopen - e.g. S3175 Mercantile Hotel