|
Hellsten Hotel ReviewSet immediately across the same street from one another, and owned and developed by the same charming and somewhat eccentric entrepreneur (Per Hellsten, an ongoing player in Sweden's music industry), these hotels share some of the same staff members and a lot of similar artistic aspirations. The residential neighborhood they occupy is the fashionable Vasastaden, a short walk northwest of the close-to-everything Stureplan. The more intriguingly furnished and more expensive of the two is the (four-star) Hellsten Hotel, which maintains a commercial recording studio in its cellar. Originally built in 1898, it was conceived as a red-brick textile mill. Amid the skylights, the sheets of glass, and the unusual Asian and African furniture and art, you'll still see traces of the original decor, including old-fashioned linen closets in unexpected cubbyholes and white-ceramic wood-burning stoves. Bedrooms (except for those on the uppermost floor, which have sloping ceilings and, in some cases, exposed wooden beams) have lavish plaster detailing on their ceilings and many hints of their original 19th-century grace. About a dozen of the rooms contain four-poster beds and original-to-the-building white-tile ceramic stoves. The government-rated three-star Rex is the less opulent of the two hotels, without the exotic sense of decorative fantasy that's the norm at the Hellsten -- it's comfortable, though. The building that contains it once functioned as the headquarters of the Swedish Lutheran Church. Rooms throughout the hotel are efficiently but not plushly decorated, in stark contrast to the more lavish digs at the Hellsten. Accommodations on the topmost floor are among the smallest in the hotel. Facilities: Note: This information was accurate when it was published, but can change without notice. Please be sure to confirm all rates and details directly with the companies in question before planning your trip.
Related Features
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 0 stars | Frommer's Recommended | |
| 1 stars | Frommer's Highly Recommended | |
| 2 stars | Frommer's Very Highly Recommended | |
| 3 stars | Frommer's Exceptional |
Frommer's ranks every hotel, restaurant, attraction, shop, and nightlife establishment it reviews for quality, value, service, amenities, and special features using a star-rating scale, an expression of the strong compare-and-contrast opinions that are a brand hallmark.
Other ratings provide stars based primarily on price and amenities; the Frommer's star rating is meant to quantify the kind of intangible, experiential elements that help travelers make informed decisions.
The "baseline" recommendation is zero stars--every hotel, restaurant, attraction, shop, and nightlife establishment that Frommer's chooses to review is recommended; otherwise, we simply wouldn't include it.