The Guinness Storehouse at St James’s Gate is one of the most visited attractions in Ireland, drawing over a million visitors a year to a seven-storey building built around the history of a single drink. The Connoisseur Experience sits on the fourth floor, behind a door most visitors walk past, in a private bar where the story of Guinness is told through taste rather than display.
The brewery at St James’s Gate has been producing Guinness continuously since Arthur Guinness signed a 9,000-year lease on the site in 1759. The original lease still exists. The Storehouse itself was built in 1904 as a fermentation plant and opened as a visitor attraction in 2000, now rising seven floors to a glass-enclosed bar at the top with views across the Dublin skyline in every direction.
The fourth floor is different from everything above and below it. A private bar, away from the main flow of visitors, with a trained Guinness connoisseur waiting at the counter and four variants lined up to be tasted in sequence.
The Connoisseur Experience takes around 90 minutes and is built around understanding what makes each variant distinct: the ingredients, the process, the temperature, the pour and the finishing. It is a structured session led by expertise, one that gives Guinness the same serious treatment a sommelier applies to wine and leaves guests with a considerably different understanding of Guinness.
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Cultural and Historical Context
Guinness is one of Ireland’s most recognised global exports, brewed in 49 countries and sold in over 150. The version most people drink outside Ireland, poured from a tap with a two-part pour and a creamy head, was developed specifically for draught service in the 1950s and is not the same drink as the bottled Foreign Extra Stout that has been exported since the 18th century.
St James’s Gate has occupied the same stretch of the Liberties neighbourhood in Dublin since 1759, when Arthur Guinness signed a 9,000-year lease on a four-acre site. By the early 20th century the brewery had grown to 26 hectares and was the largest in the world, with its own railway network, cooperage, power station and fire brigade. At its peak, one in every ten pints of beer consumed in Britain was brewed here.
The seven floors of the Storehouse cover the four ingredients of Guinness, the brewing process from grain to glass, the history of the brand and its global reach, and the advertising archive, which produced some of the most celebrated campaigns of the 20th century including the Guinness toucan and the surfer sequence directed by Jonathan Glazer in 1999.
Arthur Guinness himself is given his own floor. The Gravity Bar on the seventh floor offers a 360-degree view of Dublin that takes in everything from the Wicklow Mountains to the sea at Dublin Bay.
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Why Private or Small-Group Access Matters
The standard Storehouse experience is self-guided and moves at whatever pace the visitor sets. On a busy day, which is most days, the floors are crowded and the Gravity Bar has a queue. The experience is informative and well-produced but it is a shared one, with hundreds of other visitors moving through the same space at the same time.
The Connoisseur Experience operates separately. Access is through a dedicated entrance on the fourth floor into a private bar that holds a small group rather than a crowd. The connoisseur leading the session is a trained expert, not a general tour guide, and the 90 minutes is structured around tasting and discussion rather than moving through a series of displays.
The session closes with the pouring ritual, learning to pull a pint correctly in the two-stage pour that gives Guinness Draught its characteristic texture and finish.
What You See
The private bar is on the fourth floor, set apart from the main visitor flow with its own entrance and a counter designed for the tasting format. The room is deliberately low-key. The focus is on what is in the glass.
The four tastings arrive in sequence. Draught is the familiar version, served at three degrees Celsius with the slow cascade of bubbles settling to a dark body and a creamy white head. Original is the original bottled recipe, higher in alcohol and with a drier, more bitter profile that predates the draught version by nearly two centuries. Foreign Extra Stout is the export variant, brewed strong to survive long sea voyages and still produced to the same specification, with a roasted, almost chocolatey character distinct from anything in the standard range. Brewers Project is the experimental line, produced in small batches and covering styles outside the traditional Guinness range.
The connoisseur explains each one before the glass arrives, staying with the group throughout and adjusting the depth of the conversation to whoever is in the room. At the end of the session, guests pour their own pint under instruction before heading to the Gravity Bar for the included full pint with the Dublin skyline below.
How Do Not Disturb Makes This Possible
Do Not Disturb arranges the Connoisseur Experience with timing chosen to avoid the busiest periods of the day and booking secured in advance. The experience is available to individuals, couples and small groups, with the session length and pace adjusted to whoever is in the room.
Logistics, timing and transfer are all handled in advance. Guests arrive at St James’s Gate ready to begin.
Ready to plan your Guinness Connoisseur Experience in Dublin? Speak with Do Not Disturb to begin your journey.
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