Buckland Manor

“Strikes all the right notes for a relaxing getaway.” - AA Inspector

LOCATION

BUCKLAND, GLOUCESTERSHIRE

Official Rating
Inspected by
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Awards
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Book Direct

Our Inspector's view

Buckland Manor is a grand 13th-century manor house, surrounded by well-kept and beautiful gardens that feature a stream and waterfall. Everything at this hotel is geared to encourage rest and relaxation. Spacious bedrooms and public areas are furnished with high quality pieces and decorated in keeping with the style of the manor, while crackling log fires warm the wonderful lounges. The elegant dining room, with views over the rolling hills, is the perfect place to enjoy dishes that use excellent local produce.

Awards, accolades & Welcome Schemes

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Breakfast Award
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3-Rosette restaurant
Buckland Manor
BUCKLAND, Broadway, WR12 7LY

Features

Rooms
  • En-suite rooms: 15
  • Family rooms: 1
  • Bedrooms Ground: 4
  • Free TV
  • WiFi available
Children
  • Ironing facilities
Leisure
  • Hard Tennis Court
  • Croquet Available
  • Christmas entertainment programme
  • New Year entertainment programme
Facilities
  • Night porter available
  • Outdoor parking spaces: 20
Accessibility
  • Accessible bedrooms: 1
  • Walk-in showers
Prices and payment
  • Double room, minimum price: £250
Opening times
  • Open all year
Weddings
  • Holds a civil ceremony licence

About the area

Discover Gloucestershire

Gloucestershire is home to a variety of landscapes. The Cotswolds, a region of gentle hills, valleys and gem-like villages, roll through the county. To their west is the Severn Plain, watered by Britain’s longest river, and characterised by orchards and farms marked out by hedgerows that blaze with mayflower in the spring, and beyond the Severn are the Forest of Dean and the Wye Valley.

Throughout the county you are never far away from the past. Neolithic burial chambers are widespread, and so too are the remains of Roman villas, many of which retain the fine mosaic work produced by Cirencester workshops. There are several examples of Saxon building, while in the Stroud valleys abandoned mills and canals are the mark left by the Industrial Revolution. Gloucestershire has always been known for its abbeys, but most of them have disappeared or lie in ruins. However, few counties can equal the churches that remain here. These are many and diverse, from the ‘wool’ churches in Chipping Campden and Northleach, to the cathedral at Gloucester, the abbey church at Tewkesbury or remote St Mary’s, standing alone near Dymock.

 

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