Choose from 33 hotels and guest houses in Hertfordshire. Shown below a just a selection of the hotels available. To search within an area please use the menu on the right.
| Thistle St Albans - Watford Road, St Albans, Hertfordshire, AL2 3DS |
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On the edge of historic St Albans, with very easy access from the M25 and M1 motorways, this 4-star hotel offers free parking and superb relaxation facilities, including a swimming pool. The Thistle St Albans has been tastefully transformed into a country-house-style hotel offering modern facilities and excellent meeting rooms. The Otium Health & Leisure Club is available to all guests and includes a fitness room, an aerobics studio, a jacuzzi, a sauna and a steam room. The large indoor swimming pool also has a spa pool. A beauty salon is also available at an additional cost. The Noke Restaurant offers fine dining, while the Oak and Avocado Bar Lounge is suitable for more informal occasions. |
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| Grove End Hotel - 73 Bushey Hall Road, Watford, Hertfordshire, WD23 2EN |
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Situated within its own private garden, and boasting free on-site parking, this small, family-run hotel is ideally located in Watford, within easy reach of the M1 and Central London. Set on the B462, Grove End Hotel is well placed for access to the A41, A1 and junction 19 of the M25. Heathrow, Luton and Elstree Airports are also nearby, whilst Watford Junction/Bushey and Oxhey Railway Stations will take you to London in just 20 minutes. Start each day at Grove End with a full English buffet breakfast before heading out to explore the surroundings. In the evenings you can relax with a drink or meal in the small bar, open from 18:00 - 23:00 (last orders at 22:00). |
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| Rose and Crown Hotel - High Street, Tring, Hertfordshire, HP23 5AH |
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Dating from the 16th century, this former Tudor coaching inn stands in the heart of Tring, overlooking the town's picturesque church. Tring is a market town set in the beautiful Hertfordshire countryside and bordered by the Chiltern Hills and the Dunstable Downs. The justices met here on a highway business in 1711 and from the middle of the 17th century to the middle of the 19th century, it housed the excise office. The landlord in 1832, Timothy Norwood, brewed his own beer and was also an excise man. In 1852 it also served as the booking office for the London and Northwestern Railway Company, and later the Inland Revenue office. Even after coming off the railway, The Rose & Crown was still an important and busy coaching inn and as well as its more aristocratic connection, was also a popular meeting place for local farmers. Beer was brewed on the premises until the 1860s. The original building was Tudor with the addition of an early 18th century frontage of 3 stories with a tiled roof, 5 dormer windows and an archway entrance to the yard. It stood flush to the present pavement and had a bowling green at the rear. The hotel stood in large grounds in which fairs and circuses were held. It was demolished in around 1905. At about that time it was bought and rebuilt in the Tudor style, mainly for the guests of the family, by Lord Rothschild who lived in Tring from 1837 and whose architectural influence can be seen in much of the town. The designer was William Huckvale. |
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