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MALAHIDE
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Malahide
Mullach Íde, Co. Dublin

The Ireland's Ancient East
STOP 09 / 09
Mullach Íde · Co. Dublin

A castle held by one family for 791 years, a marina that means it, and a restaurant street that has quietly become one of the better ones in north Dublin.

Malahide has been trading on its castle for a long time, which is fair enough because the castle earns it. Richard Talbot arrived in 1185 when Henry II granted him the lands and harbour. The family held it for 791 years, losing it only briefly during Cromwell's settlement when it was given to Miles Corbet - who was later hanged for his role in the execution of Charles I. After Cromwell, the castle came back to the Talbots. In 1975, the last heir, Rose Talbot, transferred it to the state in lieu of inheritance tax. The logic was: the castle costs more to maintain than its income could cover, and the money had to come from somewhere.

The demesne is the underrated part. The Talbot Botanic Garden holds 5,000 species with a particular strength in plants from the Southern Hemisphere - a collection assembled across generations of the family's travels. Seven glasshouses, a Victorian conservatory, and the walled garden are open to visitors in summer. The Casino Model Railway Museum - housed in a Cottage Orné built by the Talbot family in the early 19th century - contains the Fry collection of model trains, moved here in 2020 after years at various locations in the castle grounds. It is the kind of museum that absorbs an unexpected hour.

The village street has steadily become one of north Dublin's better concentrations of food. Old Street, in two of the village's oldest buildings, has a Michelin recommendation. Gibney's has been a proper pub at 6 New Street since 1937. Fowler's has been licensed since 1896. The Grand Hotel on the coast road has been here long enough to be an institution without anyone quite knowing when that happened. The DART runs to the end of the line here - Malahide is the northern terminus - which makes the day simple: take the train, walk to the castle, walk to the harbour, eat somewhere on New Street, take the train back.

Population
~18,000
Walk score
Castle to harbour in 15 minutes
Founded
Castle established 1185; Talbot family 1185-1975
Coords
53.4509° N, 6.1544° W
01 / 09

At a glance.

Three things every local will eventually mention. Read these and you've already understood more than most day-trippers do.

02 / 09

The pubs.

None of these are themed Irish pubs, because they don't need to be. A few that earn the trip:

Gibney's

Proper, lively, traditional
Pub & food, est. 1937

Six New Street. The Gibney family have been here since 1937. Live music, sport, hearty food. Cold pints. Everything you are supposed to say about an Irish pub is true of this one.

Fowler's

Neighbourhood institution
Pub, licensed since 1896

One of the oldest licensed premises in the village. Family-friendly welcome, unpretentious service. The longevity explains itself when you go in.

Duffy's

Reliable local
Pub & food

On New Street, focused on food as much as drink. Guinness pie, braised lamb, all the correct things on the menu.

03 / 09

Where to eat.

PlaceTypeLocal note
Old Street Michelin-recommended restaurant €€€ Mark and Adriana Fitzpatrick restored two of the oldest buildings in the village and opened a Michelin-recommended restaurant in them. Contemporary Irish food, dry-aged beef, house-made charcuterie. Tuesday to Sunday. Book ahead; it is not large.
Town Yard Modern bistro €€ Art-deco details, parquet floors, a proper bar. Locally-sourced seafood, Irish farmed steaks, vegetarian options. The kind of place that does not take itself entirely seriously, which is the right attitude.
Gibney's Pub food €€ Hearty food in a proper pub. If you want a meal that requires no planning or booking, Gibney's handles it.
Avoca (Castle) Café, demesne In the castle grounds, open during demesne hours. The place for coffee, a soup, or a slice of cake after the botanic garden. Not dinner material, but correctly positioned as a daytime stop.
04 / 09

Where to sleep.

PlaceTypeLocal note
The Grand Hotel Four-star hotel On the coast road in Malahide. South Bank Bar, Coast Restaurant with sea views, the Marksman Bar. A long-established hotel that does the things a hotel should do, reliably and without drama.
05 / 09

Stories & lore.

The reason to come back. The things every local will eventually tell you about, usually after the second pint.

791 years

The Talbots of Malahide

Richard Talbot was granted the lands and harbour of Malahide by Henry II in 1185. The family held the castle through plague, rebellion, and plantation - losing it only from 1649 to 1660 when Cromwell granted it to Miles Corbet, who was later hanged for his role in the execution of Charles I, after which it reverted to the Talbots. The family were Hereditary Lords Admiral of Malahide when the harbour was still a working seaport. In 1975, the last heir, Rose Talbot, transferred the castle and demesne to the Irish state in lieu of inheritance tax. Fingal County Council now manages it. The 791-year tenure is not broken by the decade of Cromwellian occupation, because the Talbots were back in 1660 and stayed until 1975.

14 Talbots at breakfast, none at dinner

The morning of the Boyne

The story told in Malahide is this: on the morning of the Battle of the Boyne in July 1690, fourteen members of the Talbot family and their supporters breakfasted together at the castle. By evening, all fourteen were dead in the fighting. It is a story that historians have not been able to fully verify but that Malahide has told for over three hundred years. There is no reason to stop now.

The harbour that stopped working

Malahide as a seaport

Before silting reduced its depth, Malahide Harbour was a functioning seaport - one reason the Talbots were given Hereditary Lord Admiral status. The estuary is now a tidal inlet popular with waders and wildfowl, and the marina to the south of the village holds pleasure craft rather than trading vessels. The tidal flat visible from the marina is one of Dublin's better spots for estuary birdwatching.

Cyril Fry and the trains

The Casino Model Railway Museum

The Fry collection - assembled by Cyril Fry, a railway engineer at Inchicore Works - is one of the most significant collections of model trains in Ireland. It was displayed in Malahide Castle for years before moving permanently to the Casino Cottage Orné in 2020. The building, erected by the Talbot family in the early 19th century as a shooting lodge or summer house, is a near-perfect example of Cottage Orné architecture. The museum opened there in 2020. The trains are remarkable objects; the building they are in is equally so.

06 / 09

Things to do outside.

Wear waterproofs. Bring a sandwich. Tell someone where you're going if it's the mountain.

Castle & Botanic Garden loop Through the demesne, into the walled garden, around the parkland, back to the castle. Allow an extra hour for the garden in summer when it is in full season. The Casino Cottage is en route to the model railway museum.
3 km loopdistance
1 hour + gardentime
Malahide to Portmarnock strand South from Malahide estuary along the coastal path to Portmarnock strand. The estuary crossing at low tide is for experienced walkers who know the tidal timing - most people take the path around. Check conditions before you go.
6 km one waydistance
1.5 hourstime
Harbour walk From the village, down to the marina, along the estuary edge, back through the coastal parkland. Good for birdwatching on the tidal flats. Best at low tide when the waders are feeding.
2 km loopdistance
30 mintime
07 / 09

When to go.

There is no bad time. There are different times.

Spring
Mar-May

The botanic garden starts opening up in April and is at its best from May. Castle and demesne quiet. Good coastal walks.

◉ Go
Summer
Jun-Aug

The castle and gardens are busy on summer weekends. The village restaurant scene is at capacity on Saturday evenings - book ahead. Weekdays are much easier.

◐ Mind yourself
Autumn
Sep-Oct

The demesne in autumn is excellent. The restaurant street is at its most relaxed. The estuary tidal flats are full of migrating waders.

◉ Go
Winter
Nov-Feb

The castle tours run year-round. The botanic garden closes or reduces hours. The village stays alive - it is a real commuter town, not a summer-only place - but the specific reasons to make the trip are reduced.

◐ Mind yourself
08 / 09

What to skip.

Honestly? Don't bother.

If a local was sitting beside you, this is the bit where they'd lean in.

×
The castle interior tour without the botanic garden

The interior is an hour well spent. The botanic garden requires at least another hour and is the stronger thing. Doing one without the other leaves the demesne half-told.

×
Saturday evening dinner without a booking

Old Street and Town Yard are not large. Gibney's will absorb you without a booking but the good tables fill. Ring ahead.

×
Driving when the DART runs

Malahide is the northern terminus of the DART. The journey from Tara Street is under 30 minutes. Parking near the castle on a summer weekend requires luck and patience that the DART does not.

×
Looking for Tara's Palace dolls' house

It was at Malahide Castle for years. It moved to Powerscourt House in Enniskerry in 2011. If your guidebook still lists it here, your guidebook is fifteen years out of date.

+

Getting there.

By car

Dublin city centre to Malahide is 15km on the M1/M50 or the coast road via Clontarf. Allow 30-45 minutes. The demesne has a large car park.

By train

DART from Connolly, Tara Street, or Pearse to Malahide - 25 to 35 minutes. Malahide is the northern terminus. The village is a 10-minute walk from the station.