Montenotte Hotel

Top choice in Cork City


Built as a private residence for a wealthy merchant in the 1820s, the Montenotte has been reimagined as a boutique hotel that skilfully blends its 19th-century legacy with bold designer colour schemes. The hilltop location commands superb views, especially from the roof-terrace bar and restaurant, and guests can enjoy the hotel's sunken Victorian garden, private cinema and luxurious spa.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Cork City attractions

1. City Hall

0.78 MILES

Built in Georgian style in the 1930s to replace the original city offices, which were burnt down by renegade British forces in 1920, Cork's impressive…

2. Statue of Father Mathew

0.85 MILES

The imposing statue on St Patrick's St, just south of the River Lee North Channel, is of Father Theobald Mathew, the 'Apostle of Temperance', who crusaded…

3. Crawford Art Gallery

0.98 MILES

Cork's public gallery houses a small but excellent permanent collection covering the 17th century through to the modern day, though the works on display…

4. Holy Trinity Church

1.01 MILES

The Holy Trinity Church was designed by the Pain brothers in 1834 in the honour of Father Theobald Mathew, whose statue sits just south of the River Lee…

5. St Anne's Church

1.05 MILES

Shandon is dominated by the 1722 St Anne’s Church, aka the ‘Four-Faced Liar’ – so called because each of the tower’s four clocks used to tell a slightly…

6. Old Butter Market

1.06 MILES

Cork had the largest butter market in the world during the 1860s, exporting butter as far as India, South America and Australia. The Butter Exchange was…

7. Cork Butter Museum

1.07 MILES

Cork has a long tradition of butter manufacturing – in the 1860s it was the world's largest butter market, exporting butter throughout the British Empire …

8. English Market

1.08 MILES

The English Market – so called because it was set up in 1788 by the Protestant or ‘English’ corporation that then controlled the city (there was once an…