Get your fill of Titanic Belfast— one of the top attractions in Titanic Quarter and worth a pic or two during your stay in Belfast. If you want to experience more of the culture Belfast has to offer, head to SS Nomadic, Odyssey Complex, and SSE Arena.
Giant's Causeway is 2.4 mi (3.9 km) from central Bushmills, why not stop by during your stay. Want to stretch your legs some more? Head to Causeway Coast and Giants Causeway Visitors Centre, both a short walk away.
Take a campus tour or just explore the area of Queen's University of Belfast, during your trip to Belfast. Discover the acclaimed theater scene in this walkable area, or seek out the local tours.
Dunluce Castle is just one of the places to see in Bushmills, so why not enjoy the other things to explore during your travels? Wander the area's seaside or simply enjoy one of its top-notch restaurants.
"Very noisy in night…. Children running up and down corridor , idiots kicking/banging doors to be let in room at 01:00hrs—- very much a bad experience"
"This is the first city hotel that we have stayed in that wouldn't serve drinks to residents after the bar had closed. Very annoying as we had been to a concert next door and wanted a couple of drinks with our friends after the gig. Maybe something that could be looked into. The bar staff told us the night porter would get us drinks but he flatly refused. Put a bit of a dampner on the evening."
"Hilton, congratulations. You’ve built a hotel in Belfast that looks the part. Check-in was smooth, staff were friendly, my room was spotless, modern, and ready early. The location is excellent – right in the heart of the city. On paper, it should have been a flawless stay.
But then came the only thing that really matters: sleep.
Hilton – it’s 2025, not 1975. And yet here we are, with you still sticking bargain-bin open-coil mattresses in your rooms. Every tiny movement was met with a metallic clonk and twang like a rusty trampoline from a skip. Support? None. Comfort? Laughable. I woke up with sore hips and the horrible realisation that the floor probably would’ve been kinder. Honestly, this mattress wouldn’t cut it in a £30-a-night B&B, never mind a Hilton-branded hotel. Disgraceful.
Then there’s the air conditioning. Oh yes, you can “control” it – right down to a tropical 19°. Which, let me tell you, is far too hot to sleep in. So there I was, roasting in a room that wouldn’t cool, stuck on a mattress that groaned like scrap metal every time I dared to breathe. That’s not rest – that’s medieval punishment disguised in modern décor.
And that’s the great shame. The hotel itself is beautiful: clean, modern, smartly run, well-situated. But hotels aren’t judged on how Instagrammable the lobby is. They’re judged on whether you can actually get a night’s sleep
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