Dublin has a way of surprising people. You come expecting pubs and rain – and yes, you’ll get both , but you’ll also get one of the most walkable, characterful, and genuinely fun city centres in Europe. Victoria has been living here long enough to know which streets are worth your time and which ones you can skip, and her tour covers the best of it: the historic, the literary, the lively, and the lively atmosphere the city is known for.
Start at Trinity College, right in the heart of the city. Even if you don’t go in for the Book of Kells, the cobbled courtyard alone is worth a few minutes, it feels completely removed from the city buzzing just outside the gates. From there, Grafton Street pulls you straight into the energy of Dublin – a pedestrianised shopping strip that’s always busy, always a bit noisy, and home to some great buskers. Keep an eye out for Molly Malone on the corner, the bronze fishmonger who’s become one of the city’s most photographed and most affectionately nicknamed landmarks.
At the end of Grafton Street, St. Stephen’s Green opens up into a proper park, good for a sit-down and a breath of air before the next stretch. The St. Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre is right there at the entrance if you need it – central and topped with a glass atrium that somehow still manages to feel a bit grand. For a sugar stop, Butlers Chocolate Café is the move. It’s an Irish institution, the hot chocolate is serious, and you’ll likely leave with a small bag of truffles you didn’t plan on buying.
Explore one of the oldest buildings in Dublin
Dublin Castle is a short walk away and worth seeing even from the outside. It sits in the middle of the city like it’s slightly surprised to still be there, hemmed in by offices and government buildings on all sides. Christ Church Cathedral nearby is one of the oldest buildings in Dublin, and the interior is the kind of thing that makes you stop talking for a minute.
Temple Bar is loud, colourful, and full of tourists , but it’s also genuinely fun, especially in the evening. The cobbled streets, the live music spilling out of every door, the slightly chaotic energy but it all works. Cross the Ha’penny Bridge over the Liffey and walk the boardwalk along the river for a quieter moment before hitting O’Connell Street, Dublin’s wide, monument-lined main thoroughfare.
If the legs are tired by this point, there’s always Wetherspoons – massive, reliable, and cheaper than almost everything else around it. Victoria won’t judge you.
Dublin was featured on Tourizzy by Victoria, a local from Dublin. Download Tourizzy now and explore this irish city more.
