St Andrews Guest HousevsHashimi Hotel
St. Andrew's Scottish Guesthouse and Hashimi Hotel are both recommended by expert writers. Overall, St. Andrew's Scottish Guesthouse ranks significantly higher than Hashimi Hotel. St. Andrew's Scottish Guesthouse scores 79 with recommendations from 4 sources including Frommer's, Fodor's and Lonely Planet.
St Andrews Guest House
PO Box 8619, 1 David Remez Street, Jerusalem 91086, Israel
From $0/night
- Free Internet
- Free Breakfast
- Shuttle Bus
- Laundry Service
- Free Parking
- Meeting Rooms
Fodor's
"Built in the early 1930s as part of St. Andrew's Church, the guesthouse is as much a retreat as a place to stay overnight—"feeling like you're home" is the way they like to put it." Full review
DK Eyewitness
"This delightful hospice has large, simple bedrooms and a somewhat colonial atmosphere, which is not surprising since the all-stone building dates from the late 1920s."
Frommer's
"Situated on a small hill... and surrounded by a garden with panoramic views of Mount Zion and the Old City, this guesthouse is only a few steps to buses to all points in town." Full review
National Geographic
"The Church of Scotland owns this 1927 stone guesthouse and adjoining church originally built as a memorial to Scottish soldiers who died in the region during World War I. " Full review
Lonely Planet
"Set on a hill overlooking the Old City, with leafy gardens and an imposing stone facade, St Andrew’s feels like a bit of Scotland transported to the Middle East." Full review
Hashimi Hotel
Souq khan El-zeit # 73, Old City, Old City, Jerusalem, Israel
From $108/night
- Free Internet
- Shuttle Bus
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
- Restaurant
- Smoking Rooms
Frommer's
"A traditional-style Middle Eastern inn built some 300 years ago, but redesigned in 2006, the Al Hashimi is set around a handsome interior atrium." Full review
i
With any size room, make sure you’re facing away from the bazaar, as it can get quite noisy.
Lonely Planet
Top choice
"In the middle of the souq, this Palestinian-owned hostel imposes a number of rules on its guests (no alcohol, no unmarried couples in the same room, no credit cards, no mixed dorms)." Full review