Carlow Tourism & Carlow Tourist Office

College Street, Carlow

+353 (0) 59 9130411

[email protected]

www.members.carlowtourism.com

Opening Hours

Monday – Friday 10.00 a.m.-5.00 p.m.

1st Feb – 31st May Saturday 10.00 a.m. – 1 p.m. and 1.30 p.m. – 4.30 p.m.

1st Jun – 31st Oct Saturday 10.00 a.m. – 1 p.m. and 1.30 p.m. – 4.30 p.m.

1st Jun – 31st Aug Sundays and Bank Holidays 2 p.m. – 4.30 p.m.

1st Sep – 30th Nov Saturday 10.00 a.m. – 1 p.m. and 1.30 p.m. – 4.30 p.m.

1st Nov – 31st Jan Closed Saturdays. Check for Christmas and New Year closing times.

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10 things to do in The Carlow Town Tourist Office Carlow Ireland

  •  Altamont Gardens
  •  Brownshill Dolmen
  •  Carlow Castle
  •  Carlow Cathedral
  •  Carlow County Museum
  •  Carlow Town Hall
  •  Duckett's Grove
  •  Mount Leinster
  •  National Botanic Gardens
  •  The Carlow Courthouse
  •  The Carlow Military Museum
  •  The Carlow Town Hall Theatre
  •  The Carlow Town Heritage Trail
  •  The Carlow Town Library
  •  The Carlow Town Park
  •  The Carlow Town Tourist Information Centre and Visitor Centre
  •  The Carlow Town Tourist Information Centre
  •  The Carlow Town Tourist Office
  •  The Irish National Heritage Park
  •  The Visual Arts Centre

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     CARLOW COUNTY MUSEUM IS DELIGHTED TO WELCOME YOU

Admission remains FREE   

Carlow County Museum is located in  Carlow’s Cultural Quarter , just off the town’s main street and is entered through the tourist office. Spanning  four galleries , the museum has a wide collection of items and artefacts from Carlow county including:

  • the original  gallows trapdoor  from Carlow Gaol;
  • the 6m  carved pulpit  from Carlow Cathedral;
  • items from  Carlow’s Sugar Factory , which operated for almost 80 years;
  • the smoking pipe of  Captain Myles Keogh , killed at the Battle of Little Big Horn;
  • items relating to  John Tyndall , the Carlow scientist who discovered the greenhouse effect;
  • a 340 million-year-old  fossilized squid ;
  • a special exhibition on  St. Willibrord , an English monk who trained in Carlow before becoming the Patron Saint of Luxembourg.
  • the last cigarette smoked by and the Death Mask of  Kevin Barry , an 18-year-old medical student who was executed for his role in the Irish War of Independence;
  • the printing press used by  The Nationalist newspaper;
  • our latest exhibit, the grave effigy of Robert Hartpole, Constable of Carlow Castle and High Sheriff of Carlow, dating from 1594. …and so much more!
  • Carlow County Museum & Carlow Tourist Office College Street, Carlow Town, Co. Carlow, R93 E3T2, Ireland GPS coordinates: 52.836559, -6.928314.
  • Telephone: +353 59 913 1554
  • Email: [email protected]

Opening Hours

Visit us today and see what you’re missing!

September 2022 to May 2023

Monday to Friday*

Saturdays, Sundays & Bank Holidays

10:00am to 4.30pm (last entry 4.00pm)

The Museum will reopen on Saturdays from 7/1/23.

June to August 2023

Monday to Saturday

10:00am to to 5.00pm (last entry 4.30pm)

Sundays & Bank Holidays*

2:00pm - 4.30pm (last entry 4.00pm)

Carlow County Museum is delighted to welcome visitors to the museum. Please scroll down for general admission information and details about the available timeslots.

Admission remains FREE . For further enquiries, please contact us on by phoning the Museum on 059-9131554 or emailing  [email protected]

Opening Hours and available timeslots

From 1st September 2022 to 31st May 2023 , Carlow County Museum will be open from Monday to Friday*, 10.00am – 4.30pm , with the last admission at 4.00pm. During December 2022, the Museum will be closed on Saturdays, Sundays and Bank Holiday’s (*it will reopen on Saturdays  from 7/1/23).

The designated last admission times are to allow visitors to view the exhibits and complete their tour. 

By Appointment Only

If you are part of a group/ organisation/ historical or archaeological society then why not pre-book a FREE Guided Tour (10+ people)

Teachers, let your students enjoy our free fun School Quiz and get to handle Museum artefacts as part of the tour (also available in Irish)

The School Quiz is also suitable for students of English language schools.

To book in for a tour, please call us on 059-9131554 / or email us at [email protected]

Please click on the adjacent place names for links to  walking route options to Carlow County Museum from/to:

Nearest parking to Carlow County Museum:

VISUAL Carlow Carpark

Kennedy Street / Dinn Rí Carpark

Irishman’s Carpark

Carlow Shopping Centre Carpark  (shorter pedestrian access to Tullow Street is also available through the car park (125m)

Coach parking can be found:

Carlow Bus Park

Distance from local amenities to Carlow County Museum

Please click on the adjacent place names for links to              walking route options to Carlow County Museum from/to:

Visual Carlow

450m (240m through Carlow College grounds)

Carlow Train Station

Carlow Town Bus Station

Carlow Castle

Carlow Military Museum

Carlow Town Park

Liberty Tree

Carlow County Council

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Mission Statement

Carlow County Museum is a not for profit institution that collects, safeguards, holds in trust, researches, develops and interprets collections of original objects and original objects on loan from County Carlow and its people for the public benefit where they can find inspiration.

Carlow County Museum is operated by Carlow County Council in partnership with the Carlow Historical & Archaeological Society (CHAS) Carlow County Museum has been awarded Interim Accreditation as part of the Heritage Council’s Museums Standards Programme for Ireland (MSPI) Carlow County Museum is a Designated Museum by the National Museum of Ireland Carlow County Museum is a member of the Local Authority Museums’ Network (LAMN)

Carlow County Museum & Carlow Tourist Office

College Street, Carlow Town, Co. Carlow R93 E3T2, Ireland GPS coordinates: 52.836559, -6.928314

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Home » Travel Guides » Ireland » 15 Best Things to Do in Carlow (Ireland)

15 Best Things to Do in Carlow (Ireland)

The County Town of Carlow is in a corner of Ireland that has been inhabited since before recorded history, as the awesome Brownshill Dolmen testifies.

This Neolithic portal tomb on the edge of town is topped with a humungous granite capstone, claimed to be the heaviest in Europe.

You can make outings to noble estates on the outskirts of Carlow, like Duckett’s Grove, which has the dreamlike ruins of a Gothic Revival house that burnt down in 1933. Although not geared for tourism, Carlow has real charm, especially on the banks of the River Barrow and the old centre at Montgomery and Burrin Streets, which have rows of Georgian houses.

From around the same time there’s a striking Gothic Revival cathedral and a courthouse built like an Ionic temple.

Let’s explore the best things to do in Carlow :

1. Brownshill Dolmen

Brownshill Dolmen

An amazing piece of prehistoric engineering, the Brownshill Dolmen is an Irish National Monument and remains a prominent local waymarker.

This megalithic portal tomb is up to 6,000 years old, and was in use for up to 2,500 years.

The gigantic granite capstone on the roof of the structure weighs more than 100 tons, and is believed to be the heaviest in Europe.

When the dolmen was built the entire structure would have been covered with an earthen mound, and the gatestone that blocked the entrance remains in place.

The dolmen also retains a certain mystique because it has never been officially excavated.

2. Carlow Cathedral

Carlow Cathedral

An abiding landmark for Carlow, the town’s cathedral was consecrated in 1833 and is identified by its fabulous Neo-Gothic spire and lantern.

Climbing to 46 metres, this was designed by the Gothic Revival trailblazer Thomas Cobden, and was inspired by the Belfry of Bruges in Belgium.

The facade and spire are made from a mesmerising blue-grey stone sourced from a quarry on the Carlow-Tullow Road.

The owner of the nearby Oak Park estate, Colonel Bruen also supplied the oak for the great framed roof.

The cathedral is dedicated to former Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin, Dr James Doyle, who passed away in 1834. His marble memorial statue was designed by one John Hogan, and carved in Rome in 1839.

3. Duckett’s Grove

Duckett's Grove

For more than three centuries the Duckett family literally lorded it over the Carlow countryside to the east of the town.

Their estate covered 8,000 hectares, and in the first decades of the 19th century John Davidson Duckett ordered a Gothic Revival castellated house.

The last male Duckett passed away in 1908, and the house was later gutted by fire in 1933. The walls are practically undamaged, and decorated with castellations, window traceries, turrets and bartizans.

There are tea rooms on the courtyard where you can soak up this slightly surreal scene, while the restored walled garden has flowering shrubs, historical rose varieties and exotic peonies, all trimmed with boxwood hedges.

The warm microclimate in the gardens allows an ornamental species of banana to thrive.

4. Carlow County Museum

Carlow County Museum

At Carlow’s Cultural Quarter, which also hosts the tourist office, county library and archive, the is a museum dipping into the county’s compelling history.

The venue is the old Presentation Convent, and if there’s one object that you have to see it’s the 19th-century carved pulpit from Carlow Cathedral.

In 2013 this intricately carved fitting appeared in the book, “A History of Ireland in 100 Objects” and was removed from the cathedral for safekeeping during renovations in the 1990s.

Some other curiosities include the trapdoor from the gallows at Carlow Gaol and a pipe belonging to the Irish soldier Captain Myles Keogh, who fell at the Battle of the Little Bighorn in Montana in 1876. Also worthwhile are the exhibitions about the Carlow native John Tyndall, the physicist who first proved the Greenhouse Effect.

5. VISUAL Centre for Contemporary Art

VISUAL Centre For Contemporary Art

Carlow’s arts centre is a staggering modern building planned by Terry Pawson architects and completed in 2009. In a mass of cubes, the building is clad with opaque glass panels, glowing at night and laid on a concrete plinth.

As the name might tell you, the centre puts an accent on visual art, and has four high-spec galleries.

In April 2018 the headline exhibition was “Ttopology” by the installation artist Dennis McNulty, with new and retrospective works, all accompanied by “Totally Topological”, a zone inspired by McNulty’s art where kids can play and create.

Musicians and comedians touring Ireland also make a stop at the centre’s state-of-the-art, 320-seater George Bernard Shaw Theatre.

6. Carlow Courthouse

Carlow Courthouse

Looking like a Greek temple in the middle of the city, Carlow’s splendid Neoclassical courthouse was completed in 1834 and was part funded by the Bruen family.

The architect was William Vitruvius Morrison, and despite the orderly outer appearance the courthouse sits above a tangle of tunnels and cells.

The most recognisable element is the portico, held up by two rows of Ionic columns.

On the plinth in front is a cannon that saw action in the Crimean War (1853-1856).

7. Delta Sensory Gardens

Delta Sensory Gardens

On Carlow’s northern outskirts is a show garden attached to a garden centre selling plants and garden decorations.

If that sounds a little mundane, the gardens totally out of the ordinary.

In one hectare there are 16 interconnected areas, fastidiously manicured and sprinkled with whimsical sculptures, waterfalls, ponds, broderies, pergolas and fountains.

There’s ample inspiration for amateur horticulturalists, and it’s a joy to see the gardens change with the season, from tulips and daffodils in spring to the russet tones of the beech hedges in autumn.

One decoration that deserves a second glance is the kugel fountain, with a one-ton ball of solid marble floating in water.

8. Carlow Castle

Carlow Castle

Only the west wall and two towers of this Medieval fortress remain, but those are enough to give you an idea of the size of Carlow Castle at the peak of its powers.

The castle went up at the start of the 1210s and was most likely built by the English nobleman William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke.

The building has a tumultuous history, changing owner multiple times before it was stormed by Oliver Cromwell’s forces in 1650. Despite all that hardship, it was a doctor who exacted the killer blow on Carlow Castle, when the walls and keep were detonated to make way for an asylum in 1814.

9. County Carlow Military Museum

County Carlow Military Museum

In the church on the grounds of St. Dympna’s Hospital is a museum documenting the military history of County Carlow.

The museum has poignant origins as this set of military memorabilia was first assembled in memory of Donie Cunnigham, a soldier killed in a helicopter crash in 1996. The collection snowballed, and now there’s a comprehensive overview of Carlow’s participation in the First World War, the Irish War of Independence and the Irish Civil War.

You can pore over tableaus with reproductions of a Medieval battle and a trench from the First World War, and find out about Irish involvement in UN peacekeeping missions to Somalia, Lebanon and Congo.

Maybe the most exciting original artefact is a Brown Bess musket from the Irish Rebellion of 1798.

10. Huntington Castle

Huntington Castle

In the summer months you can come to be shown around this Plantation-era house from the 17th century.

The castle took the place of an earlier stronghold belonging to the Caviness clan, and was developed by Baron Osmonde from 1625. Oliver Cromwell took Huntington Castle during his Conquest of Ireland in 1650 because of its advantageous position on the road from Dublin to Wexford.

Film fanatics will be excited to know that scenes from Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon were filmed here in 1975. The lime tree avenue, parterre, the Yew Walk and the estate’s fish ponds are much as they were when they were first laid out by the Esmondes in the 17th century.

Tours take you in the kitchens, drawing room, a temple of Isis in the old dungeons, and out to the sacred well of St Brigid.

Beside the lake are Ireland’s oldest hydroelectric turbines, providing the castle with its own power from 1888.

11. Oak Park Forest Park

Oak Park Forest Park

Bordering Carlow Golf Club, Oak Park is on an old country estate that belonged to the landowning politicians the Bruens for more than 200 years.

Some 50 hectares are now owned by the Carlow Tourist Office, and its mixed hardwood woodland is threaded with circular colour-coded walking paths.

The 800-metre Lake Path delivers you to the ponds on the estate, with islands where swans, duck and an array of game birds make their nests.

The park has recently received an Irish Forestry Award for facilities like a bat sanctuary, picnic area and the outdoor exercise stations that line the trails.

12. Rancho Reilly

Rancho Reilly

Out in the Carlow countryside, Rancho Reilly is a children’s activity centre in four acres of farmland.

The attraction is centred on a pet farm, with ponies, miniature goats, rabbits, cows, reindeer, pot-bellied pigs and a variety of birds.

Children will be able to handle many of these animals and take part in all sorts of other fun.

That might be riding on a barrel train, bouncing on sunken trampolines, racing go-karts, scrambling over an obstacle course or playing a round on the miniature golf course.

Rancho Reilly has themed fun at Christmas, Easter and Halloween, while there’s a cafe and coffee shop serving home-cooked meals and snacks.

13. Chocolate Garden of Ireland

Chocolate Garden Of Ireland

In the village of Rath you can set foot in a genuine chocolate and ice cream factory.

You can stop by anytime and take part in a half-hour guided workshop, crafting your own chocolate mould.

While you’re waiting for the mould to set you’ll be treated to one of the factory’s ice creams.

Cocoa aficionados can deepen their knowledge of all things chocolate at one of the more advanced workshops, booked in advance.

Lasting more than three hours, the “Introduction to Chocolate Making” teaches you the art of making ganache, piping, tempering, and how to store and present chocolate like a pro.

14. Walsh Whiskey Distillery

Walsh Whiskey Distillery

On the 18th-century Royal Oak estate, the Walsh Whiskey Distillery invites visitors for tours to show how premium, hand-crafted Irish whiskey is made.

One of the largest functioning distilleries in the country, Walsh is special because every step of the process is manual, and the distillery makes all three types of Irish whiskey: malt, grain and pot still.

Writers’ Tears and the Irishman are both distilled here and have garnered multiple awards.

All of the ingredients for Walsh’s whiskey are local, as barley is in plentiful supply in Carlow, while Royal Oak sits above a 200-million-litre aquifer.

After the tour you can idle around the estate and view the newly restored Holloden House, built in 1755.

15. Milford Mills

Milford Mills

There’s an interesting chunk of local history a short way down the River Barrow from Carlow.

In an idyllic waterside setting at Milford are the eponymous mills, a fortress-like complex going back to the end of the 18th century.

Originally these water-powered mills produced wheat and corn flour and turned barley into malt, all for export to Liverpool and Manchester.

But in 1891 the main mill was converted into an electric power station.

At that moment Carlow became the first town in Ireland or Britain to produce electric power.

The plant still functions after being re-commissioned in the 1990s.

15 Best Things to Do in Carlow (Ireland):

  • Brownshill Dolmen
  • Carlow Cathedral
  • Duckett's Grove
  • Carlow County Museum
  • VISUAL Centre for Contemporary Art
  • Carlow Courthouse
  • Delta Sensory Gardens
  • Carlow Castle
  • County Carlow Military Museum
  • Huntington Castle
  • Oak Park Forest Park
  • Rancho Reilly
  • Chocolate Garden of Ireland
  • Walsh Whiskey Distillery
  • Milford Mills

InCarlow

Carlow Tourism

As the marketing and tourism company for County Carlow, Carlow Tourism provide a cohesive approach to generate awareness of Carlow as a high-quality tourist destination offering a diverse range of experiences for both visitors & locals alike.  

The role of Carlow Tourism is to increase the number of visitors, both domestic and international who holiday in Carlow each year, with the aim of maximising the economic benefits in terms of job creation and revenue.

Through collaboration and cooperation with relevant providers, agencies and organisations, Carlow Tourism’s marketing plan includes the representation and promotion of festivals, events, attractions and hidden gems through online and print channels and relevant trade shows attendance.

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Carlow Garden Trail, South East Ireland

The Carlow Garden Festival has been supported by the Carlow County Council Festival and Event Fund, Fáilte Ireland and Ireland’s Ancient East

OPEN all year round, the Carlow Garden Trail currently features 21 different gardening attractions with an additional three gardens in the surrounding counties of Kildare and Wexford. The trail includes great old gardens that have been lovingly restored and maintained throughout the years, and smaller gardens which are maturing beautifully with time.

Award winning garden centres and forest parks complement the joy of a visit here. The Carlow Garden Trail ranges from small to very large gardens, garden centres and forest parks and from old to new, so there is something to stimulate both the novice and experienced gardener. Known for its mild and temperate climate, County Carlow in Ireland’s sunny South East is the ideal destination for your gardening trip.

Snowdrop Month 2024

For more information on the upcoming events in the Carlow Garden Festival, follow the link »

Carlow Garden Festival 2023

Carlow garden trail, biodiversity gardens and trails, champion irish trees, historic houses, food experiences, garden centres and specialist plant sales, outdoor walking experiences in garden spaces, a day with the duckett’s, about co. carlow.

Situated in the South East of Ireland, approximately 90km from the ferry and airports of Dublin, Rosslare and Waterford, Carlow is the ideal location for a gardening break. Its central location also offers the perfect base to explore the bordering counties of Wexford, Kilkenny, Wicklow, Kildare and Laois.

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Moscow metro to be more tourist-friendly

A new floor sign system at the Moscow metro's Pushkinskaya station. Source: Vladimir Pesnya / RIA Novosti

A new floor sign system at the Moscow metro's Pushkinskaya station. Source: Vladimir Pesnya / RIA Novosti

For many years now, Moscow has lagged behind St. Petersburg when it comes to making life easy for tourists, especially where getting around the city is concerned. Whereas the northern capital installed English-language maps, signs and information points throughout its subway system in the late 2000s, the Russian capital’s metro remained a serious challenge for foreign visitors to navigate.

Recent visitors to Moscow may have noticed some signs that change is afoot, however. In many stations of the Moscow subway, signs have appeared on the floor – with large lettering in Russian and English – indicating the direction to follow in order to change lines. Previously, foreign visitors using the Moscow metro had to rely solely upon deciphering the Russian-language signs hanging from the ceilings.

Student volunteers help tourists find their way in Moscow

However, this new solution has a significant drawback. “The floor navigation is visible only to a small stream of people – fewer than three people per meter. During peak hours, this navigation will simply not be noticed,” said Konstantin Trofimenko, Director of the Center for Urban Transportation Studies.

One of the biggest problems for tourists in the Russian capital remains the absence of English translations of the names of subway stations in the station vestibules and on platforms. The Department of Transportation in Moscow has not commented yet as to when this problem will be solved. However, Latin transliterations of station names can already be found in the subway cars themselves.

Finding the right exit

At four of the central stations – Okhotny Ryad, Teatralnaya, Ploshchad Revolyutsii, Lubyanka and Kuznetsky Most – the city authorities have now installed colorful stands at the exits with schematic diagrams of the station’s concourse and surrounding area, which provide information about the main attractions and infrastructural facilities.

The schematic diagrams are the work of British specialists from the City ID and Billings Jackson Design firms, who have already implemented successful projects in New York and London.

According to Alexei Novichkov, expert at the Design Laboratory at the Higher School of Economics, the design of these information booths raises no objections: The color solutions, font, layout and icons are consistent with international standards.

Kudankulam

However, the stands do have some shortcomings. “Many questions are raised about the fact that the developers of these maps did not apply orientation to the north, and have provided layouts of the surrounding areas with respect to the exits,” says Novichkov. “A system like that is used for road navigators, but most of the ‘paper’ guides and maps are oriented strictly to north. The subway map is also oriented to north, so people may become confused.”

Muscovites and foreign visitors are generally positive about these navigation elements, with most of them citing the numbered exits from the subway as the most useful feature.

The fact is that many Moscow subway stations have several exits. One of the busiest central stations of the Moscow subway in particular, Kitay-Gorod, has more than a dozen exits. Previously, these exits were differentiated from each other only with signs in Russian referring to the names of streets and places of interest to which they led – making it easy for tourists and those with poor navigation skills to get confused.

Now, when making an appointment to meet a friend, instead of struggling to find the right spot when they tell you: “I'll meet you at the exit to Solyanka Street,” you can just propose to meet under a specific exit number.

“I’ve lived in Moscow for seven years,” says Angelika, a designer from Voronezh, “but I still don’t always know where to go to find the place I need, so the new schematic diagrams will be very useful. Previously, some subway stations had maps, but not with so much detail.”

Teething problems

Foreigners, meanwhile, focus their attention on other elements. “It is good that the new information boards have QR-codes, which can be ‘read’ by smartphones,” says Florentina, a writer from Vienna. But there are also shortcomings. “The English font of the information on posters and in the captions to theaters and museums is too small – you have to come very close to see it well,” she says.

Pleasant encounters on the streets of Moscow

Florentina was also dissatisfied with the fact that such posters are not provided at all subway stations: “When I was trying to find Tsaritsyno Park (a museum and reserve in the south of Moscow) at a subway station with the same name, it turned out to be quite difficult,” she says.

“There are no maps with landmarks for other areas, such as those already in the city center. There were no clear pointers in the English language, and the passers-by I met did not speak in English, so they could not help me,” she adds.

Officials say that the navigation system is gradually being redeveloped and improved. According to Darya Chuvasheva, a press representative for the Department of Transport of Moscow, the introduction of a unified navigation system will take place in stages.

“By the end of 2014, the system will first appear on the first subway stations on the Circle Line. By the end of 2015, we plan to install the system at all major stopping points, subway stations and transport interchange hubs,” says Chuvasheva.

All rights reserved by Rossiyskaya Gazeta.

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  1. Home

    With mountains, glorious countryside and river valleys all close at hand, Carlow is a county worth discovering and exploring. Against a beautiful landscape visitors will uncover a great holiday experience an exhilarating outdoor adventure, traditional rural life, vibrant shopping and a rich cultural heritage. Situated in the South East of Ireland, approximately 90km from the ferry and airports ...

  2. About Us

    Carlow Tourism is the marketing and tourism development company for County Carlow whose remit is to increase the number of domestic and overseas holidaymakers to the county and maximise economic benefits vis-à-vis job creation and revenue for the entire county of Carlow. ... Carlow Tourism and Carlow Tourist Office College Street, Carlow T ...

  3. Tourism Information and Advice

    Carlow Tourist Office is located in. Library Building, College Street, Carlow. Open Monday - Friday 10:00am to 5:00pm. Phone 059-9130411. Carlow Tours App was developed jointly by Carlow County Council and Carlow Tourism. Local authorities, together with Fáilte Ireland and Tourism Ireland, may provide information and advice to tourists on ...

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    Carlow is a place where breath-taking scenery, outdoor adventures, fabulous food and culture combine to create unforgettable experiences. Contact - Carlow Tourism Members <style>.woocommerce-product-gallery{ opacity: 1 !important; }</style>

  5. Carlow Tourism

    Carlow Tourism, Carlow, Ireland. 10,645 likes · 180 talking about this · 7 were here. With mountains, glorious countryside & river valleys, #carlow is...

  6. Carlow Tourism

    Christmas in Carlow is full of magic with seasonal sparkle and twinkling lights on every street, the scent of hot chocolate and mince pies in every café and a wealth of choice from local businesses when choosing that extra-special Christmas gift for your loved ones. From gardening to art, food hampers to fine dining, the options are endless.

  7. 10 things to do in The Carlow Town Tourist Office Carlow Ireland

    The Carlow Town Tourist Office in Carlow, Ireland, is the perfect place to start your journey around this historic town. With its wealth of attractions, activities, and events, there are plenty of things to do in Carlow. Here are 10 of the best things to do in Carlow that you won't want to miss. 1. Visit the Carlow County Museum - The ...

  8. 10 BEST things to do in Carlow in 2024 (we tried them all)

    IB4UD's tips for things to do in Carlow. 10. Oak Park Forest Park - the ideal location for a family day out. 9. Brownshill Dolmen - an impressive megalithic portal tomb. 8. Carlow Castle - an incredible 13th-century castle. 7. Dome Family Entertainment Centre - a fun-filled activity centre for all ages.

  9. Visit Us

    Carlow County Museum & Carlow Tourist Office College Street, Carlow Town, Co. Carlow, R93 E3T2, Ireland GPS coordinates: 52.836559, -6.928314. Telephone: +353 59 913 1554; Email: [email protected]; Free Admission. Open 6 Days a Week. 4 Galleries on Display.

  10. THE 15 BEST Things to Do in Carlow

    Admission is free and is entered through Carlow Tourist Office. Spanning four galleries, the museum has a wide collection of objects from the county including the magnificent 19th century pulpit from Carlow Cathedral; the original gallows trapdoor from Carlow Gaol; the smoking pipe of Captain Myles Keogh, killed at the infamous Battle of Little ...

  11. 15 Best Things to Do in Carlow (Ireland)

    Let's explore the best things to do in Carlow: 1. Brownshill Dolmen. Source: shutterstock. Brownshill Dolmen. An amazing piece of prehistoric engineering, the Brownshill Dolmen is an Irish National Monument and remains a prominent local waymarker. This megalithic portal tomb is up to 6,000 years old, and was in use for up to 2,500 years.

  12. Carlow Tourism

    The role of Carlow Tourism is to increase the number of visitors, both domestic and international who holiday in Carlow each year, with the aim of maximising the economic benefits in terms of job creation and revenue. ... Economic Development & Local Enterprise Office, Enterprise House, O'Brien Road, Carlow Telephone: (059) 912­ 9783 Email ...

  13. Carlow Tourism

    Carlow Tourism operates a busy tourist office in the South East of Ireland. With mountains, glorious countryside, and river valleys all close at hand, Carlow is a county worth discovering and ...

  14. Welcome to Carlow Garden Trail, South East Ireland

    Carlow Tourism and Carlow Tourist Office, College Street, Carlow. T: + 353 (0) 59 9130411 [email protected]. Download Brochures. Snowdrop Month in Carlow Snowdrop Gala & Other Spring Treasures Carlow Garden Trail Adelaide Memorial Church Carlow Garden Festival 2022. Download Our Map.

  15. Tourist Office Supervisor

    We are seeking a dynamic Tourist Office Supervisor to join our team and play a pivotal role in promoting Carlow as a top tourist destination. Carlow Tourism is the marketing and tourism development company for County Carlow, whose remit is to increase the number of domestic and overseas holidaymakers to the county and maximise economic benefits ...

  16. About the company

    About the company. In 1995 it was registered in Moscow representative office of «Granaria Food Group bv», which began to explore the potential of the Russian market. In February 1996, the company was founded by «Chaka», which started selling nuts under the brand name «Chaka» on the Russian market. In September 1998, Elektrostal (Moscow ...

  17. Moscow metro to be more tourist-friendly

    Student volunteers help tourists find their way in Moscow. However, this new solution has a significant drawback. "The floor navigation is visible only to a small stream of people - fewer than ...

  18. Elektrostal, Russia 2024: All You Need to Know Before You Go

    A mix of the charming, modern, and tried and true. Apelsin Hotel. 43. from $48/night. Apart Hotel Yantar. 2. from $28/night. Elektrostal Hotel. 25.

  19. Electrostal History and Art Museum

    Most Recent: Reviews ordered by most recent publish date in descending order. Detailed Reviews: Reviews ordered by recency and descriptiveness of user-identified themes such as wait time, length of visit, general tips, and location information.