Residence

Dublin, Ireland

4.2

Closed now

20 reviews

Free Wi-Fi

Map

Streetview

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Bussiness info

Takes Reservations
Yes
Delivery
No
Take-out
No
Accepted Cards
Credit, Debit
Bike Parking
Yes
Good for Kids
No
Good for Groups
Yes
Attire
Dressy
Ambience
Classy
Noise Level
Average
Music
DJ
Good For Dancing
Yes
Alcohol
Full Bar
Happy Hour
No
Best Nights
Thu, Fri
Coat Check
Yes
Smoking
Outdoor Area/ Patio Only
Outdoor Seating
Yes
Wi-Fi
Free
Has TV
Yes
Waiter Service
Yes
Caters
Yes

Description

Specialties

Residence is a private members’ club based in a serene St. Stephen’s Green townhouse in the very heart of Dublin city.

An understated entrance welcomes you into a relaxed and intimate setting where you can dine in our award-​winning restaurant or from the all day menu in the drawing rooms throughout the building and private terraced garden.

Restaurant FortyOne is located on the first floor of Residence Members Club overlooking St Stephens Green.

Bringing life, passion and taste, the dining room offers an array of stunning menus including an a la carte, table dhote, pre-​theatre and a tasting menu.

All of our dishes and the ingredients used to create them have been carefully sourced and selected by our Chef Graham Neville.

Open to both Residence members and non members.

History

Established in 2008.

Residence at No. 41 is an important and rare early house, built in 1745 for Mrs Ruth Croker, widow, whose monogram features in the tympanum of the doorcase.

Residence building is a terraced, three-​storey over basement, three-​bay Georgian townhouse with dormer attic built in 1745 it is bound to the streetscape by later nineteenth-​century decorative wrought-​iron railings with fleur-​dis-​lis finials surmounted on a granite plinth.

Internally the building remains significantly intact, retaining many elaborate architectural features and details characteristic of the mid-​eighteenth century, notably the full-​panelled rooms, fine plasterwork ceilings to the stair hall and first floor drawing room, fine craftsmanship in the carving of the stair, three fluted balusters per tread with ramped handrail, decorative tread ends, and Corinthian capitals to the newel posts.

The building would be rated «National Importance» in accordance with the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage (NIAH).