Comber (from Irish: An Comar, meaning "the confluence") is a small town in County Down, Northern Ireland. It lies 5 miles south of Newtownards, at the northern end of Strangford Lough. It is situated in the townland of Town Parks, the civil parish of Comber and the historic barony of Castlereagh Lower. Comber is part of the Borough of Ards. It is also known for Comber Whiskey which was last distilled in 1953. A notable native was Thomas Andrews, the designer of the RMS Titanic and was among the many who went down with her. It had a population of 9,078 people in the 2011 Census.
Restaurants in Comber
4.5 based on 71 reviews
Nendrum Monastery, on Mahee Island, Co Down, was founded by St Machaoi in the 5th Century and was at its prime in the year 1000. The remains of this important pre-Norman monastery include three concentric enclosures (stone walls), with ruined church, round tower stump, foundations of huts and workshops, sundial, cross-slabs and a graveyard. It is thought to be the best example of a pre-norman monastic site in Northern Ireland.
5 based on 207 reviews
Clip n Climb is based at the Dundonald International Ice Bowl. Pass reception and head left into the main arena where you will find our reception desk on your left along with the Starbucks coffee dock. We are closed on Monday's, but we are open all day on every bank holiday and school holidays. We will also open up out of hours for groups of 10 or more climbers.
Went evening midweek which was perfect for the two 7 year olds as it was quiet. This meant they nearly got one to one with the instructor. Kathy was so encouraging to the children, guiding them to the walls that would suit them best as...MoreGreat to hear you had good experience with us and you were lucky enough to have Kathy guiding your two 7 year olds on our walls. Thank you and we will hopefully see you again soon.
4.5 based on 17 reviews
The Titanic Belfast visitor attraction extends over nine galleries, with multiple dimensions to the exhibition. Drawing together special effects, dark rides, full-scale reconstructions and innovative interactive features you will explore the Titanic story in a fresh and insightful way from her conception in Belfast in the early 1900s, through her construction and launch, to her infamous maiden voyage and catastrophic demise. The journey goes beyond the aftermath of the sinking, to the discovery of the wreck and continues into the present day in the Ocean Exploration Centre.
I have been to several museums but NONE like this one. The building itself is a fascinating build with a reason behind every design choice. The structure perfectly compliments the grandeur that the Titanic once was and the city truly celebrates its shipbuilding successes.
The first part covers early days in Belfast and how it because the world leader in ship building. It then covers in great detail the rise and fall of the Titanic using inventive ways to keep you interested.
There is a ride you can chose to go on (included in the cost) which lets experience what it was like building the ship. There is also a cinema screening near the end of the museum which shows how they discovered the Titanic shipwreck. You can also look up names on the official deceased record.
The ticket also includes entry to the ship Nomadic located across the road from the museum. This boat played an important role in both World Wars and is well worth a visit.
The museum took about 2 hours and I would recommend the audio tour and you get told extra facts and keeps you move and a pace.
4.5 based on 803 reviews
Remarkable 18th-century house and 98-acre garden that reflect the rich history of the Stewart family who played a leading role in British social and political life.
House and grounds superb but let down by the worst by far of all the cafes at National Trust properties in Northern Ireland which are generally of a high standard. Too small, badly laid out - nothing flows, not particularly clean. Tables uncleared, average food, totally chaotic today and it's not Easter yet! Come on NT, you can do so much better at one of your flagship properties.
4.5 based on 137 reviews
Visited pure day spa with a friend and was looking forward to it as I had read so many good reviews. Whilst the treatment I received was enjoyable the brash reception and introduction to the Spa was very disappointing. On arrival, after a very curt.'Hello girls' it was 'there are your slippers and leave your shoes there'. Shown to two seats and given an electronic form to complete my friend tried to engage in conversation and was completely ignored. As my treatment took longer my friend was seated at reception and given a magazine - would have expected an offer of tea/coffee from a more welcoming establishment. No matter how good the treatments are first impressions and the general ambience are important. I certainly will not be back and would be very hesitant in recommending it to others.
4.5 based on 810 reviews
Explore thatched cottages, farms, schools and shops as you experience life from over 100 years ago. Chat to costumed visitor guides as they demonstrate traditional crafts and meet farm animals in the beautiful parkland of the Folk Museum. Discover more than 500 original artefacts at TITANICa, climb on and off majestic steam locomotives and explore horse drawn carriages, electric trams, boats, motorbikes, fire-engines and vintage cars in the Transport Museum.
The folk and transport museums are separate.
From stepping into the old sweetshop, to the labourers houses, to seeing how the priest and bank manager lived in relative luxury, it was eye opening to see how differently people lived in the same community. Allow three hours to do the full tour but there are plenty of shortcuts you can take if you need to. There are usually local experts like the printer and the wicker man, but I would have loved to see a carrier or a blacksmith.
The transport museum is a transporters heaven but it is fun for normal people as well. They understandably make a big deal of the Delorean and other cars built in NI but I would have liked to have seen more on motorbikes, racing, and aviation.
4 based on 159 reviews
Just back from a visit. There is no heat and the Visitors' Centre is very cold indeed. I felt sorry for the staff. There appears to be a problem with the heating system which was sourced from Eastern Europe. The local firm which installed it are no longer in business. In the cafe they are handing out blankets to customers - although we weren't offered any. ( A thought :: why should they have blankets in the cafe? Is it a longstanding problem?)
This is a delightful spot in the summertime. But if you are thinking of going in the near future you should ring ahead and find out if they have got the boiler working.
4.5 based on 182 reviews
This site, hard by sunset, is a photographer’s delight. Lines, colours, horizon, subject matter, rule of 3’s, on and on.
A good clamber upward warns your spirit and provides context for the importance of this tower.
And the views of the slough & general aviation Airport are stunning.
4.5 based on 22 reviews
We are the ONLY specialist floatation centre in Ireland, we also offer 1-1 work around Neuro Linguistics, Hypnotherapy, Time line therapy, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy and many other approaches to life coaching/change management
I have now had 2 floats and the third one booked. It is a wonderful experience. You leave completely refreshed and relaxed. The hour goes in so fast. This place is very clean and well organised. Give it a go !Thank you for your lovely feedback, look forward to seeing you for float No3 :)
4 based on 22 reviews
Just about 1km outside Comber, County Down on the road to Newtownards turn right -it's signposted-just keep going but take care-road narrows! at end good parking + toilets. Take in the peace of this view-relax, look and listen-your pulse will slow and your bp will fall-great place for a relaxing picnic-gulls help to clear up!-Walk along the causeway-check tide times for Comber on line just in case!-the island is called Rough Island and the walk round it's easy-about 15 mins-it's actually a Neolithic settlement from 5000 years ago-vikings raided this coast hence the name of the lough-Strangford-the strang fiord-very strong currents at mouth of lough-you can find flint arrowheads on the beach here-great place for dogs-or flying kites!-birdwatchers paradise-if picnics aren't you eat in Comber-The Georgian House in the Square is good for lunch-anyway enjoy your visit and come back again-James Myers
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