‘Design-led’ 114-bed hotel with rooftop restaurant – and swings – opens in Cork on Friday

In a year in which our passports have felt like relics from a bygone age, the Dean, a new design-led Irish boutique hotel, will be hoping that a visit could be just the get-away-from-it-all tonic that a lot of people are looking for.
The 114-bedroom hotel, next to Kent Station in Cork city, opens its doors tomorrow. The jewel in its crown is Sophies, a rooftop restaurant, six floors up, with panoramic views over the River Lee and the city. The 230-seat restaurant features an open kitchen, so diners can watch the chefs in action. It helps with coronavirus precautions that theres a heated covered terrace at the back of the restaurant. (All of the hotels 120 employees have been trained to work within Covid-19 regulations.)
The Dean, which is operated by Press Up Hospitality Group, says Sophies will be serving a New York Italian-inspired menu that combines favourites from its sister hotel in Dublin with new dishes created using local ingredients and suppliers, including crab from Castletown Bere, butter and yogurt from Glenilen Farm, in Drimoleague, and cured meats and cheese from Gubbeen Farm, near Schull.
The lobby of the Dean in Cork. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
The lobby of the Dean in Cork. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
A neon sign by Domino Whisker hangs above reception. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
Artwork in the lobby by Mark Francis. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
The Dean says it’s a design-led hotel. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
Light dishes will also be served in the hotel lobby, alongside coffee, tea and pastries. A hot-desking area features fast wifi and an abundance of sockets.
The walls of the hotel, including its bedrooms, are hung with more than 400 works by Irish artists, including Domino Whisker, Shane ODriscoll, the Project Twins and Leah Hewson.
Bedrooms also feature Netflix-capable smart TVs, Nespresso machines, fully stocked black Smeg mini fridges, munchie trays, Dyson hairdryers and rainfall showers. The hotel says there are no single-use plastics in its rooms, which start at 120.
A gym, pool, sauna and steam room will open in January in time for any fitness converts who have piled on the pounds over Christmas.
Sophies Restaurant at the Dean. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
Sophies Restaurant uses reclaimed timber. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
Sophies Restuarant looks out over Cork. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
A double room at the Dean. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
A double room at the Dean. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
The bathroom of a double room. Photograph: Jason Ennis/Press Up
The Dean, which also has three function spaces, says bookings are strong for both the restaurant and accommodation. Sophies restaurant is almost booked out, says Colette Walsh, the hotels head of sales, who is showing me around. It is absolutely flying. The interest is unreal. For December at weekends, from Thursdays to Sundays, we are booked out. We have midweek availability. For accomodation we are fully booked on Fridays and Saturdays in December, but we have plenty of availability midweek.
No Dean hotel would be complete without a swing: it was at the Dublin Dean, in 2015, that the former Fine Gael TD Maria Bailey had a mishap with its swing. In fact, when the architect for the new hotel appeared before Cork Circuit Court last week, to secure its licence, the State Solicitor Frank Nyhan had just one question: Where is the swing? The hotel says its swings will be in place in a matter of weeks.
The Dean Cork opens on Friday, December 11th