Cork HOTELS

Travel to Cork, - hotels selection and destination guides

You can choose and book suitable hotels in Cork from the TOP Cork HOTELS list or make search for hotels using the form. Our destination guides will provide you with information about Cork life, entertainment, history and other useful things for travel to Cork.

TOP Cork HOTELS

Maryborough House Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 221 to 331 
Maryborough House Hotel
Silver Springs Moran Hotel
Rating: 3.5
Rates: 151 to 555 
Silver Springs Moran Hotel
Bayview Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 124 to 162 
Bayview Hotel
Best Western Ambassador Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 154 to 231 
Best Western Ambassador Hotel
GRESHAM METROPOLE HOTEL
Rating: 3
Rates: 141 to 374 
GRESHAM METROPOLE HOTEL
Clarion Hotel Cork
Rating: 3.5
Rates: 163 to 200 
Clarion Hotel Cork
Hotel Isaacs Cork
Rating: 3
Rates: 146 to 203 
Hotel Isaacs Cork
TRAVELODGE CORK AIRPORT
Rating: '
Rates: 141 to 142 
TRAVELODGE CORK AIRPORT
Imperial Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 180 to 783 
Imperial Hotel
Kingsley Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 127 to 575 
Kingsley Hotel
ALL HOTELS in Cork...

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Cork guide

 Old CORK city - the second city of the Republic - is built on an island, the two channels of the River Lee embracing it either side while nineteenth-century suburbs sprawl up the surrounding hills. This gives the city centre a compactness and sharp definition. It's a place of great charm, with a history of vigorous intellectual independence, and approached from rural Ireland, it has a surprisingly cosmopolitan feel to it.

Evidence of Cork's history as a great mercantile centre is everywhere, with grey stone quaysides, old warehouses and elegant and quirky bridges spanning the river. Many of the city's streets were at one time waterways: St Patrick's Street had quays for sailing ships, and on the pavement in Grand Parade you can still see moorings dating from the eighteenth century. Important port though Cork may be, however, it doesn't feel overridingly commercial, and the Lee is certainly not the river of an industrial town. The all-pervading presence of its waters reflects and seems to double any light, so that even on the cloudiest of days there is a balmy, translucent quality to the atmosphere which effects a calm on the visitor. Cork is a welcoming, friendly place. While it has the vibrancy to enliven and excite, the pace is always Irish and somehow the island breathes enough space for all temperaments

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