The very out of date introductory film we were shown upon entering the museum really set the tone for what was to follow - the picture quality and mode of storytelling wasn't of a museum standard. It was busy so you could barely hear what was being said on the film at times over the sound of people coming in - this should be in a more cordoned off area.
The house has a tearoom, very average with teas, chocolate bars on offer - very old fashioned. Be prepared for walking up and down a lot of stairs. The house actually contains some wonderful artefacts on loan from the National Museum of Ireland, but the ESB should be ashamed of the tired and outdated presentation of the place. With the info panels and gaudy mannequins it looks like it was lifted out of a museum design circa 1995.
For far superior presentations of Georgian Homes I would recommend visiting the North-side of the city - to the Georgian Quarter. I was in and out under half an hour, as there really wasn't satisfactory information on the actual occupants of the house through the centuries, rather a general overview of how Georgian houses were used (which doesn't really do it justice of being a genuinely Dublin Georgian home) and it would have be interesting to explore its current context, as it was once part of the 'Georgian Mile', a row of fine 18th century houses which were controversially destroyed by the ESB in the 1960s. read more