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3Arena

A Victorian train shed became Ireland's biggest indoor stage. The 3Arena on North Wall Quay in the Dublin Docklands started life in 1878 as the Point Store, a railway goods depot serving the busy port; developer Harry Crosbie and Apollo Leisure converted it into the Point Theatre in 1988, and for two decades the Point was Irish shorthand for the big gig - U2 recorded part of Rattle and Hum here before the renovation, and Nirvana, Bowie, Oasis and the Spice Girls all passed through. The 2007-200.....

3Olympia Theatre Dublin, D2

First opening its doors in 1879 as the Star of Erin Music Hall, the venue now known as the 3Olympia Theatre is one of Dublin's most cherished and historic stages. Founded by the music-hall impresario Dan Lowrey on Dame Street, it has worn several names across its long life, trading as Dan Lowrey's Palace of Varieties and then the Empire Palace Theatre before settling, in 1923, on the Olympia, the name it carried for almost a century until a 2021 sponsorship deal added the 3 prefix. Architectura.....

Aviva Stadium Dublin, Ireland

Built on the hallowed turf of the former Lansdowne Road ground, the Aviva Stadium is Dublin's premier sports and entertainment arena, home to the Ireland national rugby union team and the Republic of Ireland football team. The original Lansdowne Road site staged sport from 1872, making it the oldest international rugby venue in the world, before it was demolished to make way for a state-of-the-art replacement that opened in May 2010. Designed by the renowned stadium architects Populous alongsid.....

Bachelors Walk

Bachelors Walk runs along the north bank of the River Liffey in central Dublin, a quayside street stretching from O'Connell Bridge westward toward the Ha'penny Bridge and Ormond Quay. It takes its name from a developer who built up the street, with records of the name reaching back to the early eighteenth century, when it was set out as an extension of the riverside quays from the 1670s. In its early days the street was home to merchants and grand terraced houses, and its riverside position mad.....

Button Factory

In the cobbled heart of Temple Bar, on Curved Street, the Button Factory is one of Dublin's most respected independent music and arts venues. Originally opened in 1996 as the Temple Bar Music Centre, conceived as a cultural hub for Irish music, it was renamed in 2007 in a nod to the building's former life as a button factory, and has since spent nearly three decades as a key space for live performance, club nights and album launches in the city centre. The main room is a state-of-the-art black-.....

Chillers On The Green

Located within the St Stephen's Green Shopping Centre in central Dublin, Chillers on the Green is a restaurant, bar and lounge that doubles as a late-night and nightlife venue. It blends Afro-Caribbean influenced food and cocktails with DJ-led evenings, occupying a unit inside one of the city's landmark shopping centres at the top of Grafton Street. The result is a hybrid space that works as a daytime and evening dining room and shifts into a bar and lounge atmosphere later in the week. The ven.....