The winning combination of location, history, and the contemporary reconstruction inside the apartment make this an unforgettable and haunting place to stay while in Prague. When you walk into this airy apartment filled with natural light, notice the living room, kitchen and dining room walls. These walls are actually part of the Mala Strana Tower of Charles Bridge. The whole apartment is fashionably decorated with modern furniture and colorful hand painted ceilings (in two rooms) with a lovely rose motif and furnished with quality appliances and track lighting. Two exquisite bedrooms await with an abundance of linen and towels and modern bathrooms with etched glass walls (3 bathrooms, one with a shower and one with a bathtub). The modern dining room can accommodate up to 6 people and the living offers a sofa bed and desk with a laptop connected to WiFi internet. Other amenities include satellite TV (two large plasma screen TVs), washer and dryer, dishwasher, toaster, coffee maker, kettle, microwave, iron / ironing board, and a Baumatic wine cooler. Housekeeping services once a week included in price.
The price is for 4 persons, extra person EUR 30 per night.
Also we offer a
breakfast delivery for additional EUR 12 - Menu [see
PDF] and
grocery delivery [see
PDF].
During the High Season (1.4. - 31.10.) and Christmas (23.12.-2.1.) the price is increased.
‘The Palace of the Saxons’, appropriately named as the building was a gift from King Charles IV to Rudolph, the Duke of Saxony, is located in the heart of Mala Strana literally next to the Mala Strana Tower of Charles Bridge. This old palace is truly the perfect choice for any lover of history. Originally Gothic in design (from 1356-apparent in the structural vaulting throughout the house), the house underwent a renovation after being damaged during the Hussite war and the Mala Strana fire of 1503, commissioned by the Trcka family by Italian architect De Bossi. The result was of course, a Renaissance design, displayed perfectly to this day in the beautiful multi-level courtyard arcade. The small building located inside the courtyard with the red tile rooftop housed many shops, the largest being a bookstore while there was also a pub known for its artistic clientele, Mozart and Jan Neruda among them. The façade of the building is currently Classicist from a renovation in 1826. Special attention should be paid to the front portal; the Baroque frame is original and the crest above the door is from 1657 when Leopold 1 gave Mala Strana a new coat of arms.