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Top Hotel Ritter - Badenweiler, Germany

Friedrichstrase 2
Badenweiler, 79410
Nightly Rates (97.60 - 353.95)   3 Star
Top Hotel Ritter

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Property Description
Nice family owned hotel with 75 cosy furnished rooms, all equipped with bath or shower, cable-tv, direct dial phones and balcony or terrace. Enjoy our thermal resort with swimming pool, whirlpool, sauna, steambath showertempel. The beauty salon invites you to relax with solarium and massage.therapy treatments like thalasso and ayurveda possible.The meeting room meets the requirements for your incentives, meetings or seminars. Taste the regional and french cuisine served at our quit and cosy restaurant. The hotel Ritter is your ideal location in the city center of Badenweiler for business and leisure.

Top Hotel Ritter


Rate Disclaimer
Indicative rates are for search purposes only. The entire range of rates may not be available during certain seasons or other specified periods of time. Check for specific rate availability and seasonal closing when making a reservation.

Miscellaneous Information
  • Euro is the native currency. 

  • Check in time is 13:00 PM 

  • Check out time is 11:00 AM 

  • Opened in  1900 

  • Renovated in  2005 

  • 74  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 4  floors. 


  • Directions
    The hotel is located next to the city parc. Kurhalle and bus stop within walking distance. Basel 27 KM, Zuerich 100 KM, Frankfurt am Main 350 KM

    Guarantee Policy
    You must use a credit card to book on-line.

    Cancellation Policy
    Subject to the discretion of the hotel, the cancellation policies will appear on the confirmed reservation notification. The credit card provided will be charged if the reservation is cancelled after the cancellation deadline has passed.


    Related Germany Content

    Wherever you venture in Germany, there is something interesting to see or do. It is a goldmine for the adventurous tourist in search of something different to the norm.

    The country has now firmly shaken off the shadows of its 20th century past, regained a sense of national pride, and breathed a sigh of relief at its new-found ability to express its distinctive national character again.

    Modern Germany has come of age, and while it is still suffering the economic consequences of reunification in October 1990, Europe’s most populous country is clearly
    a nation coming to terms with itself. Massive investment in the long-neglected infrastructure of the former East is paying off, as cities like Dresden once more begin to shine like the jewels they were in the past.

    The country is the product of a long history of division, first as a loose collection of independent (and often warring) states before original unification during the 19th century, and latterly as West and communist East Germany following WWII.

    For this reason alone, it is a country of remarkable diversity, with cultural differences clearly evident as one travels around the various states that make up the modern Federal Republic.

    Germany boasts a heady mix of history and nature, fine arts and youthful rebellion. Its capital, Berlin, has a reputation gained from its decades as a divided city, as a hedonistic, ‘on the edge’ community where almost anything goes. In contrast, the quiet academic surroundings of historic university cities like Heidelberg, convey a peacefulness quite at odds with the atmosphere of the capital.

    Geography
    The Federal Republic of Germany shares frontiers with Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Poland and Switzerland. The northwest of the country has a coastline on the North Sea with islands known for their health resorts, while the Baltic coastline in the northeast stretches from the Danish to the Polish border.

    The country is divided into 16 states (Bundesländer), including the formerly divided city of Berlin. The landscape is exceedingly varied, with the Rhine, Bavaria and the Black Forest being the three most famous features of western Germany. In eastern Germany, the country is lake-studded with undulating lowlands which give way to the hills and mountains of the Lausitzer Bergland, the Saxon Hills in the Elbe Valley and the Erzgebirge, while the once divided areas of the Thuringian and Harz ranges in the central part of the country are now whole regions again. River basins extend over a large percentage of the eastern part of Germany, the most important being the Elbe, Saale, Havel, Spree and Oder.

    The western area of the country consists of the Rhineland, the industrial sprawl of the Ruhr, North Rhine-Westphalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen), Hessen, the Rhineland-Palatinate (Rheinland-Pfalz) and the Saarland. In the southern area of the country are the two largest states, Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria (Bayern), which contain the Black Forest (Schwarzwald), Lake Constance (Bodensee) and the Bavarian Alps.


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