Close User Name Password
Hotel stories straight to your inbox:

Tag: train hotels View All Tags

Tags: / / /

Spend The Night in Napa in a Train Car

Go To The Hotel's Web 
  Site Where: 6523 Washington St. [map], Yountville, CA, United States, 94599
February 6, 2009 at 10:21 AM | by EricRosen | 0 Comments

No, we’re not suggesting you become a hobo, riding the rails cross-country, stopping in a Podunk town every now and then to take in the view and scrounge for scraps. But that doesn’t mean you can’t find your bliss by sleeping in a converted train car at the Napa Valley Railway Inn in Napa.

This unusual lodging establishment is located within a couple miles of the Stag’s Leap, Oakville, Oak Knoll and Rutherford districts, in the almost oppressively manicured hamlet of Yountville, ground zero for foodies and oenophiles alike.

The hotel itself is a breath of fresh air with converted railway cars for guest rooms that sit along actual railway ties from the now defunct Napa Valley Railway. That means the accommodations are narrow. Very narrow.

more ›

Tags: /

Taking the Train Is Not Just for Bridge and Tunnel Types

April 1, 2008 at 4:11 PM | by mytwocents | 0 Comments

There are model trains, hobby trains, Lionel trains, even Thomas the Train, but there's no better way to travel the globe than by train hotels and B&Bs.

While we love our traditional stationary hotels, Train Hotels may be the way to see more of the world. Imagine going through Australia, Scotland or Spain in railroad cars converted into lavish lodgings. This way you can travel in style, with comfy accommodations, plush lounges, gourmet restaurants, and friendly, personal attendants that treat you like a king and queen.

Even Wes Anderson made train hotels cool in his latest movie, The Darjeeling Limited. So which train will you be taking?

Some options after the jump.

more ›

Tags: / / /

A Night in a British Railway Station

Go To The Hotel's Web 
  Site Where: The Old Railway Station, Petworth, West Sussex, United Kingdom, GU28 0JF
March 3, 2008 at 12:24 PM | by femmefatale | 0 Comments

If you're not English and you're struggling to understand us, there are two things you need to know: we love trains (talking, reminiscing, complaining about them - we're a nation of train-spotters) and we love browsing junk in dusty antique shops.

Hence the Old Railway Station, a converted railway station with suites in old train carriages, in Petworth, West Sussex, England's region of antiques and ye-olde-tea-shoppes.

more ›

Tags: / /

The Royal York of York: A Hotel Fit for a Queen

Go To The Hotel's Web 
  Site Where: Station Road, York, United Kingdom, YO24 1AA
November 14, 2007 at 12:20 PM | by juliana | 0 Comments

From Hotel Maven Annabel Ross....

Enjoying a traditional railway tour of Ye Olde England? What better place to stop than The Royal York Hotel, a luxury Victorian building just a stone's throw away from the neighbouring train station and National Rail Museum. At the time of its opening in 1877, The Station Hotel, as it was then called, was the biggest hotel in Europe. After a visit from Queen Victoria the name was changed to the Royal Station Hotel, and finally, the Royal York.

With 170 bedrooms, each including a high-speed internet connection and a working area, a health and fitness centre incorporating a gym, sauna, steam room, whirlpool spa and swimming pool and a renowned restaurant and bar, all the bells and whistles are included in your stay at the Royal York.

There's always room for improvement, however. If the sounds made by trains annoy you, you'd be best off asking for a room on the "city wall" side of the hotel to avoid being woken by station announcements. As the hotel has recently undergone a £7m (US $14m) refurbishment, you might want to ask for one of the newly renovated rooms as well, and preferably on one of the top floors as the function room downstairs can get quite noisy.

With rooms ranging from £149 - £169 (US $300 - $340) per couple per night (including breakfast), it's not a cheap place to stay but the grounds are absolutely magnificent, the food divine and the location superb. You could do a lot worse than the Royal York, that's for sure.

[Photo: PaulJCripps]

Related Stories:
· Five Best: Railway hotels [Belfast Telegraph]
· Hotels Near Eurail Stops [HotelChatter]