How to Find Us

How to find us

Our Office is marked with a blue arrow on the map.


Directions:

From O' Connell Street:

Get the Number 10 Bus from Clerys on O' Connell Street to the Bank of Ireland, Baggot Street. Once you get off the bus, turn down Herbert Street. Herbert lane is a couple of buildings down on the right hand side of the street. The Lane is L shaped so follow it all the way down until you see a Garage with a large blue door. The IHI office is located in between two garages with blue doors. It is a white building with a large window and a high green gate in front.

From Grand Canal Dock DART station:

Turn right from the DART station onto Barrow Street. Take another right onto Grand Canal Street. Turn right and walk across the Canal Bridge. Turn left here, passing Clanwilliam Place and Warrington Place. Turn right onto Mount Street Crescent and take a left onto Herbert Lane. Our office is No. 8, which is the third building on the right, between two garages with blue doors.

From Merrion Square:

From Merrion Square West (at Dail Eireann), proceed southwards along Merrion Square South. Continue southwards on Mount Street Upper. When you are facing the Pepper Cannister Church, Pass Herbert Street, and turn right into Herbert Lane. Our office is No. 8, which is the third building on the right, between two garages with blue doors.

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Hospitality E-news

Harvey's Point is Top Wedding Venue

 

What happy couples from all over Ireland have known for generations is now official- Harvey’s Point Country Hotel in Donegal has been voted ‘Best Wedding Venue in Ireland’.

Recognition came at the third annual WeddingsOnline.ie Awards at which Harvey’s Point was named ‘Overall Wedding Venue of the Year 2012.’ The award was the outcome of voting by 17,000 Brides and Grooms nationwide who chose their Top 50 Venues. The winners were then selected by an expert panel of judges based on the quality of their service and the ‘real wedding experience.’

Deirdre McGlone (third from left) , hotelier, Harvey’s Point Country Hotel, Donegal is pictured with the ‘Overall Wedding of the Year 2012’ award at the third annual WeddingsOnline.ie Awards  in the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Dublin. Pictured with Deirdre are (from left) Paul Montgomery, Christopher Mc Menamin, Sara McCormack, Samantha McNulty, Ann Marie Gallagher and Paul Mahon.'

‘We are thrilled and honoured to be chosen for this award’, said Harvey’s Point hotelier Deirdre McGlone.

‘I remember with great joy my own wedding reception in our family hotel and since then my husband Marc and I have sought to create the perfect wedding for every Bride and Groom.’

hpwHarvey’s Point Country Hotel offers a unique wedding experience that ticks all the boxes. Its idyllic location on the shores of Lough Eske in the shadow of the Bluestack Mountains provides a perfectly romantic setting. The hospitality of the Gysling family and the expertise of the dedicated Wedding Team  creates a stress-free experience for couples from the planning stage to their Big Day. The hotel is renowned for the quality of its food, the premium guestrooms, which are among the largest in any Irish four star hotel, add to the luxury experience and the care, friendliness and professionalism of staff ensure that every Harvey’s Point Wedding Day results in lasting happy memories.

‘Brides and Grooms, who have had their weddings here over more than 22 years,  have come back to us on their anniversaries and later to celebrate family events such as Christenings and First Holy Communions, and their children now choose Harvey’s Point for their own wedding’, says Deirdre.

Little wonder therefore that Deirdre was accorded a rapturous ovation from more than 300 hoteliers and wedding industry professionals when she accepted the ‘Overall Wedding Venue of the Year’ trophy at the WeddingsOnline.ie Awards banquet .

 

 

JLC Plan 'Folly' says IHF

The Irish Hotels Federation has called attempts by the Government to resurrect the Joint Labour Committee (JLC) system 'an exercise in economic folly that is out of touch with the realities confronting tourism businesses across the country.

Paul Gallagher, President, IHF said : “At a time when many tourism businesses are struggling to survive, it is unacceptable that the Government’s focus is on restoring an outdated wage setting mechanism that severely undermines the viability of Ireland’s tourism industry. We are calling on the Government to show political gumption and face down short-sighted demands by those seeking to retain the status quo.”

 

“Job creation should not be all about the smart economy. We have a Government that is attempting to pull out all the stops to create jobs in the IT and innovation sector but their words and actions are not aligned when it comes to tourism – one of the country’s largest indigenous industries,” states Mr Gallagher.  “On the one hand we have supportive tourism initiatives such as a reduced VAT rate while on the other hand we have additional costs being imposed on tourism businesses in the form of JLCs. What we’d like is for Fine Gael, in particular, to show the courage of its convictions and follow a pro-business agenda that allows tourism to live up to its potential to act as a major engine for growth and job creation.”

 

Mr Gallagher said that payroll is the largest element of hotel and guesthouses’ costs, representing 42% relative to turnover following significant increases over the last decade. He urged the Government to create an environment that safeguards the 56,000 employees in hotels and guesthouses allows for growth in employment.  He states that, if enacted, the proposed legislation would undermine industry and State efforts to promote the tourism sector as a driver for economic growth – a policy objective to which the Government states it is committed and which has the potential to create over 20,000 new tourism jobs by 2015.

“Hotels and guesthouses, many of which are operating at a loss, are being forced to pay a premium over and above the national minimum wage,” states Mr Gallagher states. “Businesses can no longer be shackled with an obsolete system which imposes excessive wage demands and complex compliance requirements. The proposed legislation makes no sense for our country and is neither appropriate nor fit for purpose in a modern competitive economy. It has lost its relevance with the introduction of the National Minimum Wage Act and other extensive employment legislation.”

 

 

“It is astonishing that, while 440,000 people are on the live register, the Government is seeking to create another barrier to creating employment. By re-instating the JLC system the Government will in fact be facilitating an increase in the number of people on the live register.”

 

 

The Irish Hotels Federation represents almost 900 hotels and guesthouses throughout the country, which in turn employ 56,000 people. The Federation’s fundamental problem with the JLC system is that the main wage legislatively determined wage rates reflect the economic peak of 2007 rather than the dramatically worsened position of 2012 in which hotels across the board are experiencing dramatically reduced revenue and capacity utilisation.