incl. Breakfast - HRS Rating: /10 - Hotel Plavi Zamak has an unusual architecture, it's ... more
built to look-a-like a little castle, whit a nice garden where from you can enjoy a drink or a meal.The hotel is modernly equipped. The location of our facility is ...
Enjoy a homely ambience at the conveniently located Hotel Plavi Zamak in Sarajevo, close ... more
to the city centre and a 10-minute drive from the airport.The property is also close to public and taxi transport, and the friendly staff speaks English, French and German and is available all around the clock.Unwind in the comfort of your functional and modernly equipped room or in the pleasant garden.Sample skilfully prepared traditional Dalmatian and international cuisine at the charming restaurant. The meals are prepared from organic products of the highest quality, with fruits, vegetables as well as the freshest Dalmatian fish and shellfish.The restaurant at Plavi Zamak is a perfect venue for organising many events, cocktail parties, business lunches and weddings with a capacity of 70 people and 100 people in the lush garden.
Information: :Price is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
Advantages: An important piece of recent history, interesting, enlightening Disadvantages: Not a great deal to see so for the really interested only
In the mid 1990s I watched television news bulletins transfixed at the pictures coming from the besieged city of Sarajevo. For over four years the people of Sarajevo were trapped in their city, often cold, usually hungry as missiles rained down on them. In spite of many months of fierce attack plucky Sarajevo managed to defend itself ? thanks mainly to an 800 metre tunnel that connected the city with ?Free Bosnia?.
How the exact location of the tunnel was not discovered by the Serbs is a miracle. The tunnel runs under Sarajevo Airport which, although it was designated a neutral zone, was often closed due to heavy shelling. The Serbs knew roughly where the tunnel was but were never able to pinpoint it exactly. The tunnel was no secret; everyone knew of its existence, Serbs included. Food, fuel, medical supplies and arms ? all were ...
Advantages: Plenty to see; good value for money; Disadvantages: No budget flights yet (but also a good thing!)
In 1984 Sarajevo hosted the Winter Olympics; just over a decade later, the world watched as Sarajevo burned and the sites of the games became cemeteries for those killed in the siege, at four years the longest in modern warfare. Before the war Sarajevo was often described as the ?European Jerusalem? in reference to the mix of cultures who happily lived alongside each other; today an invisible line divides the city separating Bosniaks from Bosnian Serbs.
Although I remember both the Olympic Games and the Siege of Sarajevo very well, it was an earlier event that ignited my interest in Sarajevo: a postcard from a family friend, who was in Yugoslavia on business, captured my imagination and I suppose this was the start of my ?Yugophilia?. The postcard showed a famous wooden fountain that stands in Ba?Äar?ija square; it was damaged during ...
Advantages: Historic, beautiful, cheap Disadvantages: Not easily accessible, war damage
My announcement that I would be spending my summer in Bosnia met with bemused silences. "But why?", they asked - "Be careful" or "Good for you". My neighbour told me "be sure to take a headscarf with you, it's a Muslim country y'know."
So many concerned family members asked me if it was safe, that I began to have doubts. After watching the film "Welcome to Sarajevo" and reading graphic books about the conflict in an attempt at researching this forgotten corner of Europe, I felt even more unsure.
My worries were to prove unfounded. The hijab I didn't pack proved to be unnecessary, and ironically, I felt safer in Bosnia than I do at home in Birmingham.
I discover a country that is simultaneously familiar and foreign. Glamorous young people frequent the city bars, but one Bosnian girl tells me "we can only afford one coffee ...