The Beach House

LOCATION

Weston-super-Mare, Somerset

Official Rating
Assessed by
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Awards
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Our Inspector's view

The Beach House is a five-bedroom Victorian property, which has been fully renovated in 2016 to provide luxury self-catering accommodation in Weston-super-Mare on the seafront opposite the iconic Tropicana. This superb self-catering accommodation in Weston-super-Mare offers a fantastic space for social living and enjoying the company of friends, family or colleagues, as well as five uniquely furnished bedrooms.

Awards, accolades & Welcome Schemes

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ROSE Award
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Recommended for pets and their owners
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Recommended for walkers
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Recommended for families

Awards and ratings may only apply to specific accommodation units at this location.

The Beach House
44 Beach Road, WESTON-SUPER-MARE, Somerset, BS23 1BQ

Features

Rooms
  • Total units: 1
  • Maximum occupancy: 10
Children
  • Children welcome
  • Cots provided
  • High chairs
Leisure
  • Offsite tennis
  • Offsite riding
  • Offsite fishing
  • Offsite gym
Facilities
  • Private garden
  • Lawn area
  • Garden furniture
  • BBQ on site
  • Dish washer
  • Washing machine
  • Tumble dryer
  • Microwave
  • Freezer
  • Sky or freeview
  • En suite
  • Linens provided
  • Towels provided
  • Internet
Room Rates
  • Low season minimum price: £1900
  • High season minimum price: £3400
Opening times
  • Open all year

About the area

Discover Somerset

Somerset means ‘summer pastures’ – appropriate given that so much of this county remains rural and unspoiled. Ever popular areas to visit are the limestone and red sandstone Mendip Hills rising to over 1,000 feet, and by complete contrast, to the south and southwest, the flat landscape of the Somerset Levels. Descend to the Somerset Levels, an evocative lowland landscape that was the setting for the Battle of Sedgemoor in 1685. In the depths of winter this is a desolate place and famously prone to extensive flooding. There is also a palpable sense of the distant past among these fields and scattered communities. It is claimed that Alfred the Great retreated here after his defeat by the Danes.

Away from the flat country are the Quantocks, once the haunt of poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth. The Quantocks are noted for their gentle slopes, heather-covered moorland expanses and red deer. From the summit, the Bristol Channel is visible where it meets the Severn Estuary. So much of this hilly landscape has a timeless quality about it and large areas have hardly changed since Coleridge and Wordsworth’s day.

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