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llandudno Hotel accommodation - Best prices, best places. Find the lowest hotel rates guaranteed! From luxury hotels to budget accommodations. We have the best deals and discounts for hotel rooms in llandudno. Make your reservations Online.
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The Chelsea Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 55
67 Church Walks, Llandudno, LL30 2HG
Three star hotel conveniently situated within the seaside resort of Llandudno. NON SMOKING from November 2004. Recently restored to a high standard, The Chelsea is frequently noted for its immaculate interior and easy atmosphere.
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St Georges Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 40
St Georges Place, Llandudno, LL30 2LG
Sea views, mountain vistas and wonderful Welsh hospitality are the norm at this exceptional 150 year-old hotel.
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Manor Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 20.24
1 Craig-y-don Parade, Llandudno, LL30 1BG
Situated on the Promenade in Llandudno within a five minute walk of the North Wales Theatre overlooking the great orme All rooms are ensuite with breakfast included in the rate.
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Jenivore Hotel (non-smoking) |
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Rooms From: £ 22
12-14 Arvon Av, Llandudno, LL30 2DY
A warm and friendly welcome awaits you at the JENIVORE HOTEL LlANDUDNO. We are privileged to be situated just a few minutes walk from the town centre, Llandudnos North Shore and many attractions.
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Kinmel Hotel |
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Rooms From: £ 57
12 Mostyn Crescent, Llandudno, LL30 1AR
The Kinmel Hotel is a superb family run hotel, offering excellent value for money. We pride ourselves on the home from home atmosphere, together with the personal touches.
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Set on a low isthmus, across the river and a couple of miles north of Conwy, LLANDUDNO has an undeniably dignified air, its older set of promenading devotees often huddled in the glassed frontages of once-grand hotels, content to sit and watch the more rumbustious younger visitors. Almost invariably, the wind funnels between the limestone hummocks of the 680-foot Great Orme and its southern cousin the Little Orme , which flank the gently curving Victorian frontage; but don't let that put you off visiting this archetype of the genteel British seaside town.
Llandudno's early history revolves around the Great Orme, where St Tudno, who brought Christianity to the region in the sixth century, built the monastic cell that gives the town its name. When the early Victorian copper mines looked about to be worked out, in the mid-nineteenth century, local landowner Edward Mostyn exploited the growing craze for sea bathing and set about a speculative venture to create a seaside resort for the upper middle classes. Work got under way around 1854 and the town rapidly gained popularity over the next fifty years, becoming synonymous with the Victorian ideal of a respectable resort
Despite the pavilion being destroyed by fire in early 1994, Llandudno's nineteenth-century pier (open all year; free) is one of the few remaining in Wales. It juts out 2220 feet into Llandudno Bay, a leisurely ten-minute stroll along The Promenade from Vaughan Street and the region's premier contemporary art gallery, the Oriel Mostyn , 12 Vaughan St (Mon-Sat 10am-1pm & 1.30-5pm; free), which hosts temporary shows featuring works by artists of international renown, with a particular leaning towards the current Welsh arts scene.
Kids are better entertained at the Alice in Wonderland Visitor Centre , 3-4 Trinity Square (daily 10am-5pm; Nov-Easter closed Sun), where they are guided through the "Rabbit Hole", full of fibre-glass Mad Hatters and March Hares, while a headset treats them to readings of Jabberwocky and the like. The Alice books were inspired by Lewis Carroll's meeting with one Alice Liddell, the daughter of friends, here in Llandudno.
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