Good Bye Lenin - Pub & Garden Hostel!vsHotel Pod Roza
Hotel Pod Roza and Good Bye Lenin - Pub & Garden Hostel! are both rated highly by reviewers writing for major publications. On balance, Hotel Pod Roza is the choice of most writers compared to Good Bye Lenin - Pub & Garden Hostel!. Hotel Pod Roza scores 87 with recommendations from 7 reviews like Travel + Leisure, Fodor's and Frommer's.
Good Bye Lenin - Pub & Garden Hostel!
ul. Berka Joselewicza 23, Kazimierz, Krakow 31-031, Poland
From $0/night
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Free Breakfast
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
- Laundy Room
Lonely Planet
"This cheerful place has a cheeky communist theme with absurd paintings and statues mocking the imagery of the era." Full review
Frommer's
"An ironic take on Poland's now–distant Communist history, Good Bye Lenin offers clean, well-maintained facilities" Full review
Hotel Pod Roza
Ulica Florianska, 14, Krakow 31-021 , Poland
From $87/night
- Pet Friendly
- Bar/Lounge
- Hot Tub
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Free Breakfast
Insight Guides
"Tsar Alexander I once bunked here, and he was followed by Honoré de Balzac and Napoleon’s Persian emissary."
Fodor's
"Has spacious, high-ceiling guests rooms with parquet floors and Biedermeier–style furnishings; a first-class Italian restaurant; and a 15th-century wine cellar." Full review
Travel + Leisure
"Centuries-old Renaissance palace made for modern travelers, thanks to flat-screen TV’s, Wi-Fi, and a full-service gym that looks out onto the city’s medieval towers. ." Full review
Michelin Guide
"A discreet entrance leads to a surprisingly large glass-covered courtyard, complete with a formal modern restaurant and a laid-back Italian trattoria."
Star Service
"This is Krakow's oldest hotel, its roots dating back to the 14th century, when it was a private residence. It opened as a hotel in the late 17th century." Full review
Frommer's
"Franz Liszt, Tsar Alexander I and Honoré de Balzac have all passed through this grand doorway on Floriańska. Ornaments and textiles embellish the sense of history and grandeur." Full review
Frommer's
"Ornaments and textiles embellish the sense of history and grandeur, an atmosphere that extends to the first-class restaurant set over two floors in the lobby atrium, and to the cafe and wine cellar" Full review
Lonely Planet
"A hotel that has never closed, even in the dark, dreary days of communism, ‘Under the Rose’ offers antiques, Oriental carpets, a wonderful glassed-in courtyard restaurant and state-of-the-art facilities." Full review