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Sofitel

Wroclaw, Wroclaw
Sofitel Sofitel

Overview

An Excellent Hotel With An Excellent Location.

Ry0409

Additional Information

The restaurant is on the 1st floor with some tables overlooking windows to the outside, and some on the indoor balcony level overlooking the atrium of the business centre. Again the style is very modern with contemporary design features. This is an ultra modern building featuring glass and steel. The lobby is an open plan area blending with the coffee shop and bar on the ground floor of the complex. It is reached via the main entrance of the business centre. It is extremely modern in style, with light marble, steel and glass fixtures.

Directions

11 kms to the nearest airport (strachowice).

Location Information

The hotel is located in central Wroclaw, a very short walk from the Old Town Square. Buses and trams are a short distance away on foot and the railway station a short taxi ride away. The hotel itself is located in the Wratislavia Business Centre.

Rooms Information

The rooms are medium to large in size and are enjoy very contemporary decor. The colour scheme is based on light beiges and browns with modern designs and sculptures.

Wroclaw resort

Wroclaw, which is actually pronounced Vrots-waf, is something of an undiscovered jewel of Central Europe. With a troubled history like many of the cities of Poland, it has now recovered wonderfully and offers the international visitor a fascinating array of architecture, scenic rivers and bridges, a great Rynek, or city square, and some wonderful churches. You’re advised to head there now before the inevitable surge of tourists and prices arrive. Flying to Wroclaw from England will take around 2 hours, 10 minutes.You’ll want to head to the city square, or Rynek, where the city draws its energies from. Here you’ll find yourself hemmed in by wonderfully photogenic buildings with the ornate architectural flourishes and sleepy feel of old Bohemian Europe; here you can dine out and drink the rich, deep Polish beers. You might also want to take a trip to the Wroclaw Japanese Garden, where you’ll find a rich variety of ornamental flora – perfect for a lazy summer afternoon. And there’s something you simply can’t miss on your holiday to Wroclaw—the islands of Ostrow Tumski on the Oder River, with the reflection of the great cathedral on the water, it’s a romantic’s paradise. If you want to eat Polish style, you’re advised to look up Pierozek, where you’ll be treated to traditional pierogi, borsch and pancakes, and feel like you’ve just walked into a chapter of Dostoyevsky, via Poland. There’s a good number of eateries in Wroclaw however, and you’ll want to explore.

For a uniquely entertaining evening, you should seek out Pracoffnia Bar, which is a pub located in the basement of a medieval prison, where you’ll still be able to sense some of its darkly atmospheric past, while you enjoy some Polish beverages and listen to jazz ensembles.

Wroclaw, which is actually pronounced Vrots-waf, is something of an undiscovered jewel of Central Europe. With a troubled history like many of the cities of Poland, it has now recovered wonderfully and offers the international visitor a fascinating array of architecture, scenic rivers and bridges, a great Rynek, or city square, and some wonderful churches. You’re advised to head there now before the inevitable surge of tourists and prices arrive. Flying to Wroclaw from England will take around 2 hours, 10 minutes.