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Betws-y-coed
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Best Western Waterloo Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 120
Holyhead Road, Betws-y-coed, LL24 0AR
Set at the edge of the picture postcard village of Betws-y-Coed amidst the remarkable beauty of the National Park. Complete with leisure centre and indoor pool - The Waterloo Hotel makes ideal base to explore the North Wales Coast.
A premier North Wales Hotel, The Best Western Waterloo Hotel with hotel and lodge style rooms is set in the beautiful picture postcard village of Betws-y-coed makes us the ideal base to explore Snowdonia's magnificent mountains, stunning passes and beautiful coastline, either on foot or by car, along with the numerous alternative attractions in the area.
All guests receive full complimentary membership of the Leisure Centre. Enjoy our 14m heated indoor pool, children's splash pool, jacuzzi, steam room, well equipped gym and solarium. Or book an appointment with the indipendant qualified masseuse or reflexologist.
We receive numerous compliments from guests about our food, The Waterloo offers so many choices. Our traditional Restaurant uses the finest local ingredients including black beef, lamb and seafood. Our cellar offers and excellent selection of wine or beer to accompany your meal.
Children's menus are available everywhere we offer food.
Restaurant with a la carte and table d'hote menus which are dominated by local fresh produce.
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Foelas Arms Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 22.5
Pentrefoelas, Betws-y-coed, LL24 0HT
A comfortable old coaching inn with an excellent reputation for good food, fine wine and a relaxed atmosphere.
The Foelas Arms at Pentrefoelas is your gateway to near Betws-y-Coed and the Snowdonia National Park. The Foelas Arms Hotel was originally a farm, which received its Coaching Licence in 1839. The Royal Mail Coach stopped here on its way from London through Betws-y-Coed to Holyhead. Today, the coaching route is the A5. As a small family run business, we offer a warm welcome, excellent bed and breakfast accommodation, very reasonably priced, and good food. Nearby activities include golfing, fishing, go-karting, horse riding, white water rafting, walking and climbing Mount Snowdon (or take the train).
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Sprawled out across a flat plain at the confluence of the Conwy, Llugwy and Lledr valleys, BETWS-Y-COED (pronounced "betoos-er-coyd"), the much-vaunted "Gateway to Snowdonia", is hard to avoid. Its riverside setting, overlooked by the conifer-clad slopes of the Gwydyr forest, is undeniably appealing, and the town boasts the best selection of hotels and guesthouses in the region, but after an hour mooching around the outdoor equipment shops and drinking tea you may well be left wondering what to do. For serious mountain walkers, the best advice is to continue on, but for everyone else there are some delightful - and fairly easy - strolls from town into the surrounding hills and river valleys. Particularly good are the two local beauty spots of the Conwy and Swallow falls, though these can get pretty congested in high summer.
This one-time lead-mining town remained a backwater until 1815 when, as part of his A5 toll road, Telford completed the graceful Waterloo Bridge (Y Bont Haearn), speeding access for the leisured classes already alerted to the town's beauty by J.M.W. Turner's landscapes. The arrival of the railway line in 1868 lifted its status from coaching station to genteel resort, an air the town tries to maintain, albeit without much success. By the station, the Conwy Valley Railway Museum (Easter-Oct daily 10.30am-5.30pm; Nov-Easter Sat & Sun 10.30am-4.30pm) presents a fairly standard collection of memorabilia and shiny engines, slightly enlivened by the chance of a short ride on a miniature train or tram. The Motor Museum (Easter-Oct daily 10am-5pm), a couple of hundred yards away behind the tourist office, is little better, with a half-dozen classic bikes and fifteen cars, including a 1934 Bugatti Straight 8 and a Model T Ford.
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