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Palace Hotel - Manchester, United Kingdom

Oxford Street
Manchester, M6O 7HA
Nightly Rates (253.29 - 382.88)   3 Star
Palace Hotel

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Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
Situated right in the heart of the city centre, the Palace Hotel is a recognised landmark of Manchester, thanks to its distinctive 217ft tall clock tower. Once home to the Refuge Assurance Company, this magnificent terracotta grade II listed building has recently undergone a major £7 million refurbishment and investment programme to enable us to offer the ultimate in luxury hotel accommodation, facilities and standards. The hotel stands directly opposite the Palace Theatre and is just a short journey from the Opera House and Bridgewater Hall, home of the famous Halle Orchestra. Close by are many excellent museums and art galleries and the grounds for the city?s two premiership football teams. All 257 of the hotel?s en-suite bedrooms have been furnished to an upper four star standard to ensure your comfort is guaranteed. Whether you choose a standard, Ambassador or contemporary room, you can be assured that you will experience one of the most comfortable and memorable bedroom experiences in the country. The Palace Hotel offers unrivalled facilities for meetings, conferences, banqueting and special events with function rooms, equipped to the highest of standards accommodating between 2 and 100 delegates theatre style or 810 people for dinner. The brand new Tempus Bar is the ideal venue to meet new friends or relax whilst having a pre-dinner drink. Easily accessible by road, rail and air, the Palace Hotel is situated directly opposite Oxford Street Station, is within walking distance of Piccadilly Station and is just a short journey from Manchester International Airport.

Palace Hotel


Amenities
  • Air Conditioned

  • 220 AC

  • Bar/Lounge

  • Porters

  • Business Center

  • Conference Facilities

  • Coffee Maker in Room

  • Concierge Desk

  • Handicapped Rooms/Facilities

  • Doctor on Call

  • Hairdryers Available

  • Guest Laundromat

  • Lounge

  • Multilingual

  • Multilingual

  • News Stand

  • Parking

  • Radio

  • Restaurant

  • 24 Hour Room Service

  • Safe Deposit Box

  • Safe

  • Secretarial Service

  • Smoke Detectors

  • Telephone

  • Turndown Service

  • TV

  • Television with Cable


  • Rate Disclaimer
    Room rate ranges are a general guideline. Specific rates will be displayed based on your day of arrival and room rates available. Click on the "Book It" icon to view specific rate information, guarantee and cancel policy. To speak with a reservation agent, please call 1 800 207-6900 USA and Canada. If calling from outside the U.S.A., see our international reservation phone numbers at www.hotelbook.com/brands/HB/bookit.htm

    Miscellaneous Information
  • British Pounds is the native currency. 

  • 257  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 5  floors. 


  • Directions
    Manchester Int Airport 10 mi S, Liverpool John Lennon Airport 33 mi N, Leeds / Bradford Airport 47 mi S, Palace Theatre adjacent, GMEX 500 metres, Piccadilly Train Station opposite hotel, Victoria Train Station, Chorlton Street Bus Station -- 1 mi, Subway 500 metres

    Guarantee Policy
    A credit card is required to book online. Peak seasons may require your card is charged in advance. Reading the rate rules after selecting your rate will indicate if your card will be charged. This information will appear in your email confirmation.

    Cancellation Policy
    Subject to the discretion of the hotel, the credit card provided may be charged if the reservation is canceled after the cancellation deadline has passed or if the guest fails to arrive. The cancellation policy will appear after selecting rate rules.


    Related United Kingdom Content

    Despite its relatively small size, the United Kingdom is one of the most culturally diverse countries on Earth, peopled by four main ‘native’ nationalities, plus later arrivals from all over the world. The United Kingdom consists of Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales), plus Northern Ireland. The Isle of Man and the Channel Islands (principally Jersey and Guernsey) are also parts of the British Isles, but somewhat confusingly not officially part of the UK.

    The UK is also a topically diverse country, with such landscapes as the rolling
    moors of Yorkshire, the lakes and mountains of the Lake District and Scotland, and the ancient forests of Nottinghamshire or the stunning beaches of Wales. All this, as well as genteel villages with chocolate-box cottages or vibrant cities at the forefront of modernity, means the UK has something to offer everyone.

    London is the natural starting point for visitors and is a great introduction to this varied country, with famous sights such as the Houses of Parliament and the London Eye and renowned exhibitions in the National Gallery, Natural History Museum and Tower of London.

    Not far out from the capital are the university cities of Oxford and Cambridge, with their elegant architecture, and Windsor, home to the Queen’s famous castle residence.

    The British seaside is at its best in the south coast resorts of Brighton and Bournemouth or the harbor villages in Cornwall, Dorset and Devon. For more beautiful, wilder, windswept beaches, head to the Pembrokeshire coast of Wales or the Scottish islands of Skye, Shetland and Orkney.

    Walkers have no end of choice with hundreds of miles of hiking trails in the hilly Peak District, the mountainous Lake District, Wales and Scotland or along the coastal paths of southern England. For more gentle pursuits, pretty villages of the Cotswolds and Suffolk offer endless photo opportunities of thatched cottages or leaning timber-framed houses.

    Geography
    The British landscape can be divided roughly into two kinds of terrain – highland and lowland. The highland area comprises the mountainous regions of Scotland, Northern Ireland, northern England and North Wales. The English Lake District in the northwest contains lakes and fells. The lowland area is broken up by sandstone and limestone hills, long valleys and basins such as the Wash on the east coast. In the southeast, the North and South Downs culminate in the White Cliffs of Dover. The coastline includes fjord-like inlets in the northwest of Scotland, spectacular cliffs and wild sandy beaches on the east coast and, further south, beaches of rock, shale and sand sometimes backed by dunes, and large areas of fenland in East Anglia.

    Note: The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland consists of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Although they form one administrative unit (with regional exceptions), they have had separate cultures, languages and political histories. The United Kingdom section consists of a general introduction (covering the aspects that the four countries have in common) and sections devoted to the four constituent countries. The Channel Islands (Alderney, Guernsey, Jersey, Sark and Herm) and the Isle of Man are dependencies of the British Crown. These are included here for convenience of reference.

    More detailed geographical descriptions of the various countries may be found under the respective entries.


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