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Quality Inn Edenholme Grange - Launceston, Tasmania

14 St. Andrews Street
Launceston, TS 7250
Nightly Rates (114.08 - 158.44)   2 Star
Quality Inn Edenholme Grange

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
Experience past times in this grand and private Victorian mansion. There are uniquely themed rooms, furnished with antiques and some with spa baths. In the spacious grounds is a self-contained cottage with modern amenities including two bathrooms. Hotel Breakfast Room: 7:00am-9:30am-Continental Breakfast 12.00, Full Breakfast- 19.00.

Quality Inn Edenholme Grange


Amenities
  • AM/FM Alarm Clock

  • Babysitting/Child Services

  • Bar/Lounge

  • Business Center

  • Car Rental Desk

  • Continental Breakfast

  • Coffee Maker in Room

  • Copy Service

  • Desk with lamp

  • FAX

  • Hairdryers Available

  • Iron

  • Guest Laundromat

  • Microwave

  • Modem Lines in Room

  • Modem Lines in Room

  • No Smoking Rooms/Facilities

  • No Pets Allowed

  • Parking

  • Outdoor Parking

  • Radio

  • Refrigerator

  • Room Service

  • Smoke Detectors

  • Telephone

  • TV Remote Control

  • Video Tapes

  • Wake-up Service

  • Wet Bar


  • Miscellaneous Information
  • Australian Dollars is the native currency. 

  • Check in time is 1400 

  • Check out time is 1000 

  • 8  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 2  floors. 


  • Directions
    From the Airport terminal, turn right towards Launceston and take the freeway at the 1st roundabout. Entering Launceston, at the bottom of the hill, turn left at the first traffic lights and then right into Maitland St, up the hill on Frankland St. St Andrews is the 2nd on left, with a gold color house on the corner. Edenholme Grange is at the end of the street and you enter the driveway before you see the house. From North: East or West approach, find Margaret St. which runs North and South on the west side of the city and proceed South until the end of the street. Turn right up the hill on Frankland St and St. Andrews is the 2nd on the left with a gold house on the corner. Edenholme Grange is at end of the street.

    Guarantee Policy
    PPD

    Cancellation Policy
    30D

  • Launceston General Hospital ... 1 kilometer

  • Cataract Gorge ... 1 kilometer

  • Government Offices ... 2 kilometers

  • Museum ... 2 kilometers

  • Shopping Mall ... 2 kilometers

  • University of Tasmania ... 7 kilometers


  • Related Tasmania Content

    Lush with rainforests, soaring peaks and white-sand beaches backed by dense bushland, Tasmania, Australia’s island state, is an area of outstanding natural beauty. Enchanting forests that include the world’s tallest and rarest trees are recognized through a system of 20 national parks. The countryside owes its conservation to decades of struggle - thankfully, considering some of the most beautiful spots in Australia are to be found here.

    Tasmania’s relatively small size contradicts its ecological diversity. Being an island, it harbors
    distinct wildlife, many of which are endangered or extinct elsewhere: the infamous Tasmanian devil, the spotted-tail and the eastern quoll are the three biggest carnivorous marsupials on the planet.

    Long periods of isolation from the mainland meant that the Tasmanian Aborigines developed their own idiosyncracies, and Tasmania is full of remnants of their heritage. When British colonisers sought a new penal colony, Tasmania’s isolation rendered it favorite, triggering years of tragic violence against its Aborigines. Eeriness haunts the Victorian streets of Launceston and the penal colony Port Arthur. Tasmania’s preserved buildings are both aesthetically wonderful and historically shocking.

    War between colonisers and indigenous inhabitants meant that by 1876, the last full-blooded Tasmanian Aborigine had died, severing a link that had run roughly 60,000 years.

    Geography
    A separate island located 240km (149 miles) south of Melbourne across Bass Strait. Roughly heart-shaped, Tasmania is 296km (184 miles) long, ranging from 315km (196 miles) wide in the north to 70km (44 miles) in the south. The island has a diverse landscape comprising rugged mountains (snow-capped in winter), dense bushland (including the Horizontal Forest, so-called because the tree trunks are bent over parallel to the ground), tranquil countryside and farmland. Approximately 40% of Tasmania is protected in national parks and other reserves, over half of this being the World Heritage-listed temperate wilderness in the west of the island. Located midway between Victoria and the northwest of Tasmania in Bass Strait lies King Island. This rich and fertile island, famous for its beef and dairy products, is regularly serviced by air carriers and is a popular tourist destination. To the northeast of Tasmania, also in Bass Strait, can be found Flinders Island, part of the Furneaux group of islands. Flinders Island is also popular with visitors and is particularly noted for its excellent coastal fishing and pristine beaches. Bruny Island, south of Hobart across the D’Entrecasteaux Channel, has superb beaches and an abundance of marine wildlife. The two parts of the island are joined by a narrow isthmus of sand dunes, the home of Fairy Penguins from August to April.


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