Lansdowne Place Boutique Hotel and Spa is a beautiful blend of period features mixed ... more
with with contemporary decor All 84 bedrooms and suites are sunny bright and spacious equipped with plasma televisions with satelitte TV broadband Internet acces...
Information:
Price is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
Dating back to 1854, Lansdowne Place Hotel is a boutique hotel situated right by the ... more
seafront in Brighton on England's south coast, one mile from the city centre shops and pier. The 84 guestrooms are spread over four floors and blend contemporary decor and sleek dark wood furnishings with 19th century period features. Modern amenities include plasma screen televisions with satellite channels, high speed Internet connections, coffee/tea makers, hair dryers and all marble bathrooms. Many rooms have sea views. Guests can enjoy modern European dining in The Grill restaurant and relax with a cocktail or light snack on leopard print chairs in the lounge bar. Open 24 hours a day, the front desk can offer a range of services including currency exchange and dry cleaning, and offer advice on facilities provided by the hotel. These include a ballroom for business conferences or banqueting, supported by audio visual equipment, wireless Internet and a business centre, as well as additional meeting rooms. Room service is available around the clock and guests arriving at the hotel by can park in the garage (surcharge). Those wishing to explore the lively city of Brighton will find the pebbly beach just 50 metres from the hotel and the city centre, with its winding boutique filled streets and hip bars and clubs, is a mile away. Brighton train station is 1.5 miles from the hotel, and the nearest airport is London Gatwick, 23 miles away. Taxis are available at the airport terminals and should cost around 40 GBP to the hotel. Frequent train services runs from the airport directly to Brighton station (1.5 miles from the hotel). Alternatively, coach services run from London Victoria coach station to Brighton at regular intervals. Please Note: The hotel does not accept bookings for stag and hen parties and reserves the right to refuse bookings on this basis.
Information: :Price is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
Dating back to 1854, Lansdowne Place Hotel is a boutique hotel situated right by the ... more
seafront in Brighton on England's south coast, one mile from the city centre shops and pier. The 84 guestrooms are spread over four floors and blend contemporary decor and sleek dark wood furnishings with 19th century period features. Modern amenities include plasma screen televisions with satellite channels, high speed Internet connections, coffee/tea makers, hair dryers and all marble bathrooms. Many rooms have sea views. Guests can enjoy modern European dining in The Grill restaurant and relax with a cocktail or light snack on leopard print chairs in the lounge bar. Open 24 hours a day, the front desk can offer a range of services including currency exchange and dry cleaning, and offer advice on facilities provided by the hotel. These include a ballroom for business conferences or banqueting, supported by audio visual equipment, wireless Internet and a business centre, as well as additional meeting rooms. Room service isavailable around the clock and guests arriving at the hotel by can park in the garage (surcharge). Those wishing to explore the lively city of Brighton will find the pebbly beach just 50 metres from the hotel and the city centre, with its winding boutique filled streets and hip bars and clubs, is a mile away. Brighton train station is 1.5 miles from the hotel, and the nearest airport is London Gatwick, 23 miles away. Taxis are available at the airport terminals and should cost around 40 GBP to the hotel. Frequent train services runs from the airport directly to Brighton station (1.5 miles from the hotel). Alternatively, coach services run from London Victoria coach station to Brighton at regular intervals. Please Note: The hotel does not accept bookings for stag and hen parties and reserves the right to refuse bookings on this basis.
Information: :Price is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
Advantages: Nice Rooms, Good Bar, Games Rooms Disadvantages: Garages
, the room was cleaned well and the waiting staff were helpful, the cooks got the food out quickly and the barman was very friendly.
My Opinions:
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The hotel was very nice and on the whole a good experience. I would stay there again anytime but I would not get a garage as they are not very good. The only other downside is the rattling delivery carts but they will only bother you if your staying at the back of the hotel like me. If you stay on the front of the hotel I'm sure your experience would be even better because you won't here the noisy delivery carts and you will get lovely sea views. This hotel has been given two stars, I would rate it higher than this and I would recommend a stay in the Lansdowne if you ever come to Eastbourne. ...
Advantages: Free entry Disadvantages: Gets very crowded
superimposed in front of some world famous landmark like the Great Pyramid or the Taj Mahal.
In summary this is a great place and if you are are in Brighton then it?s a place you really can?t miss. ...
micksheff 09.05.2009
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Brighton Pier
Advantages: Free admission, lots to see Disadvantages: None for me
The Booth Museum is located on Brighton's suburban back streets well away from the town centre but having said that it is on Dyke Road (the A2010) which is one of the major routes through the town and so it is relatively easy to find.
The museum is named after the Victorian natural historian Edward Thomas Booth who spent much of his life in Brighton. Primarily it houses his personal collection of stuffed birds but there are also animals, insects, fossils and skeletons. These collections were amassed during his lifetime and contain over half a million different specimens. He lived between 1840 and 1890.
Like most Victorian naturalists of the time he was an avid collector. It seems odd nowadays to think that someone that was considered to be such a lover of these creatures should hunt them down and shoot them. However we need to ...