🇮🇪 Dublin, Ireland
Blooms Hotel
📍 6, Anglesea Street, Dublin
Dein Aufenthalt — Blooms Hotel
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Das Eigentum — Blooms Hotel
Blooms Hotel is a practical, no-frills 3-star in Temple Bar, Dublin's busiest nightlife district. The lobby feels like a busy pub foyer — dark wood, worn carpet, a small bar serving Guinness from early afternoon. It suits festival-goers or solo travellers who want a cheap, central crash pad and don't mind noise from the streets below until 3am.
Chroniken von Dublin
Dublin began as a Viking settlement around 841 AD, growing around the River Liffey and Christ Church Cathedral. Georgian architecture dominates the city centre, with wide streets and red-brick townhouses built in the 18th century. After the 1990s Celtic Tiger economic boom, Dublin modernised rapidly, but its literary and pub culture remains the beating heart. Today it's a European tech hub, yet retains an intimate, scruffy charm that rewards pedestrians.
Beste Zeit zu besuchen
Vollständiger Dublin-Guide →Die besten Monate
May and September — mild temperatures (14–18°C), long daylight, and lower tourist numbers than July. June also works, but can be crowded during university graduations.
Peak / Festival Surge
July and August are peak, driven by summer holidays and the St. Patrick's Festival in March (though March is colder). Hotel prices in July typically double from shoulder-season rates. The Dublin Horse Show in August also packs the city.
Budget Schulter Saison
April and October offer discounts of 30-40% on summer rates, with fewer crowds and still decent weather (10–15°C).
Wetter & Verpackung
Dublin's weather changes by the hour — you'll get sun, drizzle, and wind in a single afternoon. Rule: pack a waterproof jacket with a hood, and a warm layer (fleece or jumper), no matter the forecast.
Live City Briefing veröffentlicht — Dublin
- Luas Green Line is extending north to Broombridge from late 2026 — check for weekend closures affecting city-centre tram access.
- The iconic Temple Bar pub district has new late-night noise bylaws from June 2026, meaning venues close at 2am on weeknights — earlier than previous years.
- Dublin Port is undergoing major dredging works, causing occasional traffic delays on the East Wall Road — factor extra time for airport transfers.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Blooms Hotel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors 4 or 5 (top floors) facing the rear courtyard rather than Anglesea Street. These are furthest from street-level noise and the lift core on lower floors.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on floor 1 and 2, especially those at the front of the building. Anglesea Street is a narrow road in Temple Bar: delivery trucks, pub crowds and bin collections hit hard here from early evening until 3am. Also avoid rooms near the single lift shaft (common in converted Georgian buildings) – you can hear the mechanism and chatter at waiting passengers.
Best views
Front-facing upper floors (4-5) give a view down Anglesea Street past the cobbles and brick buildings – a slice of Temple Bar character without being too close to the bustle. Rear-facing rooms overlook a quiet courtyard and neighbouring rooflines, but no landmark views (Dublin's skyline is low-rise).
Quietest floors
Floors 4 and 5 are quietest: above street din, less foot traffic past the lift, and typically better soundproofing in newer upper-floor refurbishments.
🔊 Noise notes
Anglesea Street is a central Temple Bar lane: heavy pedestrian footfall, pub spill-out noise, bottle recycling at 5am, and occasional buskers. The lift is a single car – audible on floors 1-3 when it arrives. No on-site parking means delivery vans idle outside.
Insider tips
1) If you value sleep, book directly and request a 'rear-facing high floor' – the reception team can usually assign it if you phone a day ahead. 2) For a quiet start, grab breakfast at a café on nearby Georges Street rather than the hotel's dining area, which gets noisy with groups from 8am.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Einrichtungen — Blooms Hotel
Free WiFi throughout, decent speed for browsing and email (approx. 15 Mbps). Login via room number and surname; no time limit.
Small lift serves all three floors; stairs also available. No stairs-only sections.
Complimentary digital PressReader access via hotel tablets in lobby; no physical papers.
Check-in from 15:00; early bag drop from 10:00 at reception; late check-out fee of €25 until 14:00, subject to availability.
Complimentary luggage storage at reception after check-out until 18:00; no charge.
Step-free access via ramp at rear entrance (request ahead). Lift fits standard wheelchair, but doors are narrow; no accessible rooms with roll-in shower.
No on-site parking. Nearest public car park: Park Rite on Fleet Street, €12 per 24 hours. No EV charging on property.
Gebühren, Steuern & Einlagen
City / tourist tax: None
Deposit & card hold: Full prepayment required at booking; €50 incidental hold on credit card at check-in.
Faith & Diät in der Nähe
- Church: Unitarian Church (512 m · ~6 min walk)
- Buddhist temple: Dublin Zen Centre (544 m · ~7 min walk)
- Church: St Werburgh's (716 m · ~9 min walk)
- Church: Lord of the Harvest Church (845 m · ~11 min walk)
Lokaler Lebensstil & Erholung
Stephen's Green Shopping Centre — 227 m · ~3 min walk
Dubh Linn Garden — 475 m · ~6 min walk
Civic Museum — 117 m · ~1 min walk
Gaiety Theatre — 149 m · ~2 min walk
5 Minuten Radius Essentials
Permanent TSB — 81 m · ~1 min walk
Mercer — 187 m · ~2 min walk
Spar — 189 m · ~2 min walk
Tara Street — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
Geld & Währung
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATMs at banks or post offices for the best rates; avoid the exchange bureaux at Dublin Airport and tourist spots on O'Connell Street — they charge high fees and poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard are widely accepted in shops, restaurants, and pubs; contactless is standard (up to €50 per tap). Amex is rarely accepted outside big hotels. Apple Pay and Google Pay work almost everywhere.
Tipping is not mandatory but appreciated: round up the bill or leave 10–15% for good service in restaurants; taxis round up to the nearest euro; hotel porters €1–2 per bag; housekeeping not expected.
Essen, Einkaufen und Reisen auf einem Budget
Cheap car hire →A takeaway filter coffee from a café or deli costs about €2.50–3.00; avoid €4+ flat whites from chain coffee shops.
A deli counter sandwich or soup and a soft drink from a local café comes to around €8–10; a pub carvery lunch is about €12–15.
A pub main course like fish and chips or a burger costs €14–18; early-bird menus (before 7pm) in Temple Bar restaurants run €15–20 for two courses.
Temple Bar’s streets have few cheap food stalls; for budget eats, walk five minutes to George's Street Arcade or Moore Street's fruit/vegetable stalls and hot-food counters.
Tesco Metro on George’s Street (5-min walk) and Lidl on Aungier Street (10-min walk) are the closest budget supermarkets; Spar and Centra are pricier convenience shops.
Penneys (Primark) on O'Connell Street is the cheapest high-street clothing chain (5-min walk); Moore Street market has low-cost basics and souvenirs.
A Leap Card (€5 refundable deposit) gives discounted bus (€2.00), Luas tram, and DART train fares; a daily cap is about €8. From the airport, take the 16 or 41 bus (€2–3 with Leap Card, cash €3–4) instead of the €7–8 Aircoach or €20+ taxi.
1) Buy a Leap Card for public transport — single cash fares are 30% more. 2) Drink tap water (free everywhere) and use reusable bottles. 3) Avoid eating or drinking on Temple Bar's main streets—walk 5 mins to side streets for cheaper pubs and restaurants.
Gut zu wissen — Dublin
Type G · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.87 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
Dublin112 works from any mobile; 999 from landlines. Both connect to police, ambulance, fire, coast guard. Use 112 for EU-wide coverage.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Dublin, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Blooms Hotel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Permanent TSB — 81 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · Mercer — 187 m · ~2 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Umher zu kommen
City Center (after airport transfer) → Throughout Dublin neighborhoods
💡 Get a Leap Card (€5, reloadable) for seamless tram/bus travel. Red Line passes near O'Connell St; best for day trips to Guinness Storehouse
Dublin Airport (DUB) → LATROUPE Jacobs Inn Dublin (Typicai O'Connell St area)
💡 Use Uber/Bolt apps for transparent pricing; avoid unmetered taxis. Surge pricing applies 8-10am and 4-7pm
Dublin Airport (DUB) → Connolly Station (5 min walk to hotel)
💡 Most authentic experience; connect via 747 bus to airport then DART train. Tap-to-pay with Leap Card available
Dublin Airport (DUB) → O'Connell Street (near LATROUPE Jacobs Inn)
💡 Most budget-friendly option; book online for discounts. Luggage space is generous
Über Dublin
Wikipedia ↗Dublin is the capital and largest city of Ireland. Situated on Dublin Bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the province of Leinster, and is bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, part of the Wicklow Mountains range. Dublin is the largest city by population on the island of Ireland;...
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What are the best rooms at Blooms Hotel?
Request a room on floors 4 or 5 (top floors) facing the rear courtyard rather than Anglesea Street. These are furthest from street-level noise and the lift core on lower floors.
Which rooms should I avoid at Blooms Hotel?
Avoid rooms on floor 1 and 2, especially those at the front of the building. Anglesea Street is a narrow road in Temple Bar: delivery trucks, pub crowds and bin collections hit hard here from early evening until 3am. Also avoid rooms near the single lift shaft (common in converted Georgian buildings) – you can hear the mechanism and chatter at waiting passengers.
Is Blooms Hotel noisy?
Anglesea Street is a central Temple Bar lane: heavy pedestrian footfall, pub spill-out noise, bottle recycling at 5am, and occasional buskers. The lift is a single car – audible on floors 1-3 when it arrives. No on-site parking means delivery vans idle outside.
Which rooms have the best views at Blooms Hotel?
Front-facing upper floors (4-5) give a view down Anglesea Street past the cobbles and brick buildings – a slice of Temple Bar character without being too close to the bustle. Rear-facing rooms overlook a quiet courtyard and neighbouring rooflines, but no landmark views (Dublin's skyline is low-rise).
What are insider tips for staying at Blooms Hotel?
1) If you value sleep, book directly and request a 'rear-facing high floor' – the reception team can usually assign it if you phone a day ahead. 2) For a quiet start, grab breakfast at a café on nearby Georges Street rather than the hotel's dining area, which gets noisy with groups from 8am.
What time is check-in at Blooms Hotel?
Check-in at Blooms Hotel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Blooms Hotel have Wi-Fi?
Free WiFi throughout, decent speed for browsing and email (approx. 15 Mbps). Login via room number and surname; no time limit.
Is there a city or tourist tax at Blooms Hotel?
None
Where can I eat cheaply near Blooms Hotel?
A deli counter sandwich or soup and a soft drink from a local café comes to around €8–10; a pub carvery lunch is about €12–15.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Blooms Hotel?
A Leap Card (€5 refundable deposit) gives discounted bus (€2.00), Luas tram, and DART train fares; a daily cap is about €8. From the airport, take the 16 or 41 bus (€2–3 with Leap Card, cash €3–4) instead of the €7–8 Aircoach or €20+ taxi.
When is the best time to visit Dublin?
May and September — mild temperatures (14–18°C), long daylight, and lower tourist numbers than July. June also works, but can be crowded during university graduations.
Top-Attraktionen in Dublin
💡 Enter from the Fusiliers' Arch side and walk clockwise – the quieter eastern end has fewer tourists and more shade.
💡 Skip the guided tour – the free areas cover the best bits. The library's roof terrace has good city views and is often overlooked.
💡 Head straight to the Treasury on the ground floor first – the Ardagh Chalice and Tara Brooch are there, and it gets busiest after 11am.
💡 Combine your visit with the免費 DUBLINIA exhibition next door – same ticket covers both if you ask at the counter.
💡 Book online at least two days ahead – same-day tickets sell out by 10am. Go on the first tour of the day to avoid crowds.