About the Hotel
Bedrooms
The hotel has 46 individually decorated en-suite bedrooms, including standard and premier rooms. All rooms have colour television, radio, direct dial telephone, hairdryer, together with tea and coffee making facilities.
Eating and Drinking
The elegant Season’s Restaurant offers an extensive a la carte menu together with an excellent and imaginative wine list. Alternatively the hotel bar with it’s views onto Bath’s South Parade, serves a mouth-watering selection of light meals and snacks. Relax and unwind in the comfortable lounges with afternoon tea or perhaps a pre-dinner drink.
Parking
The hotel does not have on-site parking. There is a large public pay and display car park opposite the hotel, charges apply.
Hotel Facilities:
Longleat House & Safari Park
Longleat House nestles alongside the magnificent Half Mile lake within the landscaped gardens set out by Capability Brown. Inside is a wealth of history and antiquity from superb paintings, Flemish tapestries, French furniture. In the vast park enjoy the sights and sounds of the lions, tigers, rhino and giraffes. There is plenty for the children to enjoy from the maze to the adventure castle and railway. Plenty to keep all the family entertained.
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Museum of Costume
The story of fashion over the last 400 years is brought alive at the Museum of Costume, the finest museum of fashionable garments in the world. The displays include 200 dressed figures to illustrate the changing styles in fashionable clothes from the late 16th century to the present day, chosen from the museum's collection of 30,000 original items.
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Shopping in Bath
When it comes to shopping, it's a case of quantity and quality. Bath has more - and better - shops than a city ten times its size. It is a shoppers paradise - in addition to all the familiar names and big stores there's a fabulous choice of smaller specialist and independent shops all wrapped up in a compact, visitor-friendly centre that's a delight to explore.
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Stonehenge
The great and ancient stone circle of Stonehenge is one of the wonders of the world. What visitors see today are the substantial remnants of the past in a sequence of such monuments erected between circa 3000BC and 1600BC. Each monument was a circular structure, aligned with the rising of the sun at the midsummer solstice.
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The Jane Austen Centre
Celebrating Bath's most famous resident, The Jane Austen Centre offers a snapshot of life during Regency times and explores how living in this magnificient city affected Jane Austen's life and writing. 'Live' Guides, costume, film, superb giftshop and an authentic sense of history.
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