Pictures of: Belfast
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Weather
Summer is mild and partly cloudy; winter is long, very cold, with precipitation and almost cloudy sky. Throughout the year, the weather is strong winds. Throughout the year, the temperature generally ranges from 3 ° C to 18 ° C and is rarely below -1 ° C or above 22 ° C.
Tourist points
Ulster Museum - In the Botanic Gardens - it's collections include contemporary international art, Irish art, Irish furniture, glass, silver, ceramics, and custom, and a display of life in Ireland over 9,000 years.
Linen Hall Library - Located near City Hall, this facility was established in 1788 to improve the mind and excite the spirit of general inquiry.
Crown Liquor Saloon- Belfast's most famous pub, the Crown Liquor Saloon, once a railway hotel, has been restored by the conservationist National Trust.
Botanic Gardens - The Palm House dates from 1839, an elegant structure of curved glass and cast iron recently renovated.
Home Front Heritage Center - Nostalgic exhibits from World War II. The museum of the Royal Ulster Rifles, the famous regiment raised in 1793, is in the same building.
Belfast Zoo - In a picturesque mountain park high above the city.
Cave Hill - Climb the hill beyond Belfast Castle for a great view. A prominent rock at the top, known as MacArt's Fort, is where the United Irishmen planned rebellion in 1795.
Belfast Port and Harbor - City bus tours pass by the wharf where Titanic was built. Occasional tours of the harbor and the historic Harbor Office.
Lagan Valley Regional Park- Pleasant walks along the towpath past canal locks and lock-houses.
Dixon Park - The City of Belfast international rose trials are held in this beautiful park every year in July. At any time in the summer, there are always at least 100,000 blooms to see.
Visit an art gallery, step into St Anne's Cathedral, go souvenir hunting for fine Irish linen, pottery and hand-cut crystal in Belfast's covered arcades.
In the evening book into the, Grand Opera House or see a theater performance. You may decide to end up at a musical pub like the Duke of York, or atmospheric Kelly's Cellars.
The City Hall, built around 1903, dominates the main shopping area. Built in the grand Classical Renaissance style, with an Italian marble interior, it looks rather like American state capitol buildings except for the big statue of Queen Victoria at the front.
Half a century and a half a mile apart City Hall from Queen's University, with its mellow brickwork and Tudor cloister.
This southern part of the city is good for moderately priced restaurants, pubs and accommodation, and for shopping and theater. The Botanic Gardens and the Ulster Museum are here too.
The Belfast Harp Festival was held in this building in 1792 when the famous gathering of ancient Irish harpers included blind 94-year-old Denis Hempson who played his Londonderry harp with long crooked fingernails.
Linen Hall Library - Located near City Hall, this facility was established in 1788 to improve the mind and excite the spirit of general inquiry.
Crown Liquor Saloon- Belfast's most famous pub, the Crown Liquor Saloon, once a railway hotel, has been restored by the conservationist National Trust.
Botanic Gardens - The Palm House dates from 1839, an elegant structure of curved glass and cast iron recently renovated.
Home Front Heritage Center - Nostalgic exhibits from World War II. The museum of the Royal Ulster Rifles, the famous regiment raised in 1793, is in the same building.
Belfast Zoo - In a picturesque mountain park high above the city.
Cave Hill - Climb the hill beyond Belfast Castle for a great view. A prominent rock at the top, known as MacArt's Fort, is where the United Irishmen planned rebellion in 1795.
Belfast Port and Harbor - City bus tours pass by the wharf where Titanic was built. Occasional tours of the harbor and the historic Harbor Office.
Lagan Valley Regional Park- Pleasant walks along the towpath past canal locks and lock-houses.
Dixon Park - The City of Belfast international rose trials are held in this beautiful park every year in July. At any time in the summer, there are always at least 100,000 blooms to see.
Visit an art gallery, step into St Anne's Cathedral, go souvenir hunting for fine Irish linen, pottery and hand-cut crystal in Belfast's covered arcades.
In the evening book into the, Grand Opera House or see a theater performance. You may decide to end up at a musical pub like the Duke of York, or atmospheric Kelly's Cellars.
The City Hall, built around 1903, dominates the main shopping area. Built in the grand Classical Renaissance style, with an Italian marble interior, it looks rather like American state capitol buildings except for the big statue of Queen Victoria at the front.
Half a century and a half a mile apart City Hall from Queen's University, with its mellow brickwork and Tudor cloister.
This southern part of the city is good for moderately priced restaurants, pubs and accommodation, and for shopping and theater. The Botanic Gardens and the Ulster Museum are here too.
The Belfast Harp Festival was held in this building in 1792 when the famous gathering of ancient Irish harpers included blind 94-year-old Denis Hempson who played his Londonderry harp with long crooked fingernails.
Presentation
Belfast is the largest city and capital of Northern Ireland and the province of Ulster, being the second largest city on the island of Ireland.
A 17th-century village, this rugged northern metropolis of nearly half a million people - a third of Northern Ireland's population - has much in common with Liverpool and Manchester, those airy cities across the Irish Sea. Belfast was the engine room that drove the wheels of the industrial revolution in Ulster. The development of industries such as linen, rope making, and shipbuilding doubled the size of the city every ten years. The world's largest dry dock is located here and the shipyard's giant cranes tower over the harbor.
Today the city and river are being transformed again and much of the city center is now pedestrian friendly, with benches where you can sit and listen to street musicians.
There are many lush Victorian and Edwardian buildings with elaborate carvings on doors and windows. Heads of gods and poets, scientists, kings and queens carved in stone peek from the high edges of the benches and the old linen warehouses.
A 17th-century village, this rugged northern metropolis of nearly half a million people - a third of Northern Ireland's population - has much in common with Liverpool and Manchester, those airy cities across the Irish Sea. Belfast was the engine room that drove the wheels of the industrial revolution in Ulster. The development of industries such as linen, rope making, and shipbuilding doubled the size of the city every ten years. The world's largest dry dock is located here and the shipyard's giant cranes tower over the harbor.
Today the city and river are being transformed again and much of the city center is now pedestrian friendly, with benches where you can sit and listen to street musicians.
There are many lush Victorian and Edwardian buildings with elaborate carvings on doors and windows. Heads of gods and poets, scientists, kings and queens carved in stone peek from the high edges of the benches and the old linen warehouses.
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