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Belfast

Crown Saloon
By Rick Steves

Seventeenth-century Belfast was only a village. With the influx, or "plantation," of English and (more often) Scottish settlers, the character of the place changed. After the Scots and English were brought in — and the native Irish were subjugated — Belfast boomed, spurred by the success of the local linen, rope-making, and shipbuilding industries. The Industrial Revolution took root with a vengeance. While the rest of Ireland remained rural and agricultural, Belfast earned its nickname ("Old Smoke") during the time when many of the brick buildings you'll see today were built. The year 1888 marked the birth of modern Belfast. After Queen Victoria granted city status to this boomtown of 300,000, its citizens built the city's centerpiece, City Hall.

Belfast is the birthplace of the Titanic (and many ships that didn't sink). The two huge, mustard-colored cranes (the biggest in the world, nicknamed Samson and Goliath) rise like skyscrapers above the harbor. They stand idle now, but serve as a reminder of this town's former shipbuilding might.

Today, big investments from south of the border — the Republic of Ireland — are injecting quiet optimism into the dejected shipyards where the Titanic was built, developing the historic Titanic Quarter. Cranes are building condos along the rejuvenated Lagan riverfront.

It feels like a new morning in Belfast. It's hard to believe that the bright and bustling pedestrian zone was once a subdued, traffic-free security zone. Now there's no hint of security checks, once a tiresome daily routine. These days both Catholics and Protestants are rooting for the new Belfast Giants ice-hockey team, one of many reasons to live together peacefully.

Still, it's a fragile peace and a tenuous hope. Mean-spirited murals, hateful bonfires built a month before they're actually burned, and pubs with security gates are reminders that the island is split — and 800,000 Protestant Unionists prefer it that way.

Sightseeing Highlights

Tours

Walking Tour: The Historic Belfast Walk takes you through the historic core of town (£6, 90 min; departs from TI at 14:00 on Wed, Fri, and Sat; June-Sept also on Sun; confirm tour times with TI, book in advance, tel. 028/9024-6609).

Big Bus Tours: City Sightseeing offers the Living History Tour, the best introduction to the city's recent and complicated political and social history. You'll cruise the Catholic and Protestant working-class neighborhoods, with a commentary explaining the political murals and places of interest — mostly dealing with the Troubles of the last 40 years. You see things from the bus and get out for photos only (£12.50, 90 min, daily on the hour 10:00-16:30, fewer tours in winter — call first; depart from corner of Royal Avenue and Castle Place across from McDonald's, 2 blocks north of Donegall Square; pay cash at kiosk or on bus, or book by phone with credit card; tel. 028/9062-6888).

Boat Tours: The Lagan Boat Company shows you shipyards on a 75-minute Titanic Tour cruise, narrated by a member of the Belfast Titanic Society. The tour shows off the fruits of the city's £800 million investment in its harbor, including a weir built to control the tides and stabilize the depth of the harbor (it doubles as a free pedestrian bridge over the River Lagan). The heart of the tour is a lazy harbor cruise past rusty dry-dock gates, brought alive by the guide's proud commentary and passed-around historical photos (£10; daily sailings at 12:30, 14:00, and 15:30; fewer off-season, tel. 028/9033-0844, mobile 077-1891-0423). Tours depart from the Lagan Pedestrian Bridge and Weir on Donegall Quay. The quay is located just past the leaning Albert Clock Tower, a five-minute walk from the TI.

Pub Tour: The Historical Pub Tours of Belfast mixes drinks and history. You'll start at the Crown Dining Room pub and end six pubs later (£6, drinks not included, May–Oct Thu at 19:00, Sat at 16:00, 2 hours, book in advance, meet at pub above Crown Liquor Saloon on 46 Great Victoria Street, across from Hotel Europa, tel. 028/9268-3665).

City Hall
City Hall

This grand structure was closed in 2007 for renovation, and is due to by January 2010.  With its 173-foot-tall copper dome, it dominates the town center. Built between 1898 and 1906, with its statue of Queen Victoria scowling down Belfast's main drag and the Union Jack flapping behind her, it's a stirring sight. In the garden, you'll find memorials to the Titanic and the landing of the U.S. Expeditionary Force in 1942 — the first stop en route to Berlin.

If it's open, take the free 45-minute tour (June–Sept usually Mon–Fri at 11:00, 14:00, and 15:00, Sat at 14:00 and 15:00; Oct–May Mon–Fri at 11:00 and 14:30, Sat only at 14:30; no tours on Sun; enter at the front of the building except for Sat, when you enter at the back on the south side; call to check schedule and to reserve, tel. 028/9027-0456). The tour gives you a rundown on city government and an explanation of the decor that makes this an Ulster political hall of fame. Queen Victoria and King Edward VII look down on city council meetings. The 1613 original charter of Belfast granted by James I is on display. Its Great Hall — bombed by the Germans in 1941 — looks as great as it did the day it was made. If you can't manage a tour, at least step inside, admire the marble swirl staircase, and drop into the "What's on in Belfast" room just inside the front door.

Catholic and Protestant Neighborhoods

It will be a happy day when the sectarian neighborhoods of Belfast have nothing to be sectarian about. For a look at a couple of the original home bases of the Troubles, explore the working-class neighborhoods of the Catholic Falls Road and the Protestant Shankill Road or Sandy Row.

You can get tours of Falls Road or Shankill Road (see listings below), but rarely are both combined in one tour. Ken Harper is part of a new breed of Belfast taxi drivers who will give you an insightful private tour of both (£25 minimum or £8 per person, 75 min, tel. 028/9074-2711, mobile 0771-175-7178, kenharper2004@hotmail.com).

Falls Road: At the intersection of Castle and King Streets, you'll find the Castle Junction Car Park. This nine-story parking garage's basement (entrance on King Street) is filled with old black cabs — and the only Irish-language signs in downtown Belfast. These shared black cabs efficiently shuttle residents from outlying neighborhoods up and down the Falls Road and to the city center. This service originated almost 40 years ago at the beginning of the Troubles, when locals would hijack city buses and use them as barricades in the street fighting. When bus service was discontinued, local paramilitary groups established the shared taxi service. Although the buses are now running again, these cab rides are still a great value for their drivers' commentary.

Any cab goes up the Falls Road, past Sinn Fein headquarters and lots of murals, to the Milltown Cemetery (£4, sit in front and talk to the cabbie). Hop in and out. Easy-to-flag-down cabs run every minute or so in each direction on the Falls Road.

Forty trained cabbies do one-hour taxi tours (minimum £30, £10/person for 90 min, £20/additional hour, cheap for a small group of up to 6 riders, tel. 028/9031-5777 or 078/9271-6660).

The Sinn Fein office and bookstore are near the bottom of Falls Road. The bookstore is worth a look. Page through books featuring color photos of the political murals that decorate the buildings. Money raised here supports families of deceased IRA members.

A sad, corrugated structure called the Peace Wall runs a block or so north of Falls Road (along Cupar Way), separating the Catholics from the Protestants in the Shankill Road area.

At the Milltown Cemetery, walk past all the Gaelic crosses down to the far right-hand corner (closest to the highway), where the IRA Roll of Honor is set apart from the thousands of other graves by little green railings. They are treated like fallen soldiers. Notice the memorial to Bobby Sands and nine other hunger strikers. They starved themselves to death in the nearby Maze prison in 1981, protesting for political prisoner status as opposed to terrorist criminal treatment. The prison closed in the fall of 2000.

Sandy Row

Shankill Road and Sandy Row: You can ride a shared black cab through the Protestant Shankill Road area (£25 for 1–2 people, £35 for 3–6 people, 60 min, tel. 028/9032-8775). Depart from North Street near the intersection with Millfield Road; it's not well-marked, but watch where the cabs circle and pick up locals on the south side of the street.

An easier (and cheaper) way to get a dose of the Unionist side is to walk Sandy Row. From Hotel Europa, walk a block down Glengall Street, then turn left for a 10-minute walk along a working-class Protestant street. A stop in the Unionist memorabilia shop, a pub, or one of the many cheap eateries here may give you an opportunity to talk to a local. You'll see murals filled with Unionist symbolism. The mural of William of Orange's victory over the Catholic King James II (Battle of the Boyne, 1690) thrills Unionist hearts.

Ulster Folk and Transport Museum

This 180-acre, two-museum complex straddles the road and rail at Cultra, midway between Bangor and Belfast (8 miles east of town). The Folk Museum, an open-air collection of 34 reconstructed buildings from all over the nine counties of Ulster, showcases the region's traditional lifestyles. After wandering through the old-town site (church, print shop, schoolhouse, humble Belfast row house, and so on), you'll head off into the country to nip into cottages, farmhouses, and mills. Most houses are warmed by a wonderful peat fire and a friendly attendant. It can be dull or vibrant, depending upon when you visit and your ability to chat with the attendants. Drop a peat brick on the fire.

The Transport Museum (downhill, over the road from the folk section) consists of three buildings. Start at the bottom and trace the evolution of transportation from 7,500 years ago — when people first decided to load an ox — to the first veritical take-off jet. The lowest building holds an intriguing section on the sinking of the Belfast-made Titanic. Nearby are exhibits on the Belfast-based Shorts aircraft company, which partnered with the Wright Brothers to manufacture the first commercially available aircraft in 1909. Two other buildings cover the history of bikes, cars, and trains. The car section rumbles from the first car in Ireland (an 1898 Benz) through the "Cortina Culture" of the 1960s to the local adventures of John DeLorean and a 1981 model of his car.

Cost, Hours, Location: £5.50 for Folk Museum, £5.50 for Transport Museum, £7 combo-ticket for both, £19 for families; July–Sept Mon–Sat 10:00–18:00, Sun 11:00–18:00; March–June Mon–Fri 10:00–17:00, Sat 10:00–18:00, Sun 11:00–18:00; Oct–Feb closes daily at 16:00. Check the schedule for the day's special events (tel. 028/9042-8428). Allow three hours for your visit. Expect lots of walking. Those with a car can drive from one section to the next.

From Belfast, reach Cultra by taxi (£10), bus #502 (2/hr, 30 min from Laganside Bus Centre), or train (£4 round-trip, 2/hr, 15 min, from any Belfast train station or from Bangor). Trains and buses stop right in the park, but train service is more dependable. Public transport schedules are skimpy on Saturday and Sunday.

Updated for 2010. For lots more information, check out our best-selling Rick Steves' Ireland guidebook — or join us on one of our free-spirited tours in Ireland.