Belfast’s sustainable tourism surge: “We’re at the end of the beginning”
Belfast is going full steam ahead on sustainable tourism — from collecting rainwater on the roof to green hotels.
Belfast is going full steam ahead on sustainable tourism — from collecting rainwater on the roof to green hotels.
The Shelbourne Dublin is on a mission to become a zero-waste hotel. It’s a lofty goal for any establishment, let alone a 200-year-old luxury hotel known as the Grand Dame of Dublin.
Everyone is talking about sustainability these days. Here’s how one Irish luxury luggage manufacturer is quietly doing it.
Sustainability has become a marketing buzzword lately. But these five nations are the real deal: Here are the world’s greenest destinations.
How do you make Kilkea Castle sustainable? That’s the difficult question its owners had to answer when they renovated the old fortress and turned it into the Kilkea Castle Estate & Golf Club.
If you want to know about sustainability in Ireland, you have to ask Gareth Mullins to take you on his Dublin food tour.
It only takes a quiet moment in the forest outside of Billnäs for the idea of Finnish sustainability to come into focus. If you’re lucky, someone like Sami Tallberg will be there to guide you through the experience.
Sure, Finland has always been a green and sustainable destination, to hear someone like Kristiina Kukkohovi talk about it. Residents have cared for the environment and are embracing recycling, renewable energy and the elusive circular economy.
The City Museum in Gothenburg, Sweden, is one of several museums with an aggressive sustainability program.
When it comes to sustainable tourism in northern Sweden, there’s one guiding principle: If you build it, they will come.