The Bulkeley Hotel

“Grade I listed property with views across to Snowdonia” - AA Inspector

LOCATION

BEAUMARIS, ISLE OF ANGLESEY

Official Rating
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Our Inspector's view

A Grade I listed hotel built in 1832, The Bulkeley is just 100 yards from the 13th-century Beaumaris Castle in the centre of town. Friendly staff create a relaxed atmosphere. Refreshments and meals are served throughout the day in a choice of bars, a coffee shop, the fine dining restaurant and bistro. The well-equipped bedrooms and suites, some with four-posters, are generally spacious, and have pretty furnishings. Many of the rooms have fine panoramic views across the Menai Straits to the Snowdonian Mountains.

The Bulkeley Hotel
Castle Street, BEAUMARIS, Isle of Anglesey, LL58 8AW

Features

Rooms
  • En-suite rooms: 43
  • Family rooms: 3
  • Free TV
  • WiFi available
Children
  • Children welcome
Leisure
  • Christmas entertainment programme
  • New Year entertainment programme
Facilities
  • Lift available
  • Night porter available
  • Outdoor parking spaces: 25
Accessibility
  • Accessible bedrooms: 4
  • Walk-in showers
Prices and payment
  • Single room, minimum price: £45
  • Double room, minimum price: £70
Opening times
  • Open all year
Weddings
  • Holds a civil ceremony licence

About the area

Discover Isle of Anglesey

Some of the oldest rocks in Britain form the 125-mile coastline of the 85 square mile Anglesey Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, which includes Holy Island with its busy port of Holyhead, the terminus for the Dublin ferry. The terrain inland is mainly a fertile plateau worn flat by the action of the sea, with low ridges and shallow valleys, while the sheer limestone cliffs of the east coast and on the north coast at Holyhead Mountain represent some of the most spectacular sea cliffs in Britain. 

On the steep northern and eastern cliffs, guillemots, choughs, cormorants and razorbills nest, while on the huge precipice of Gogarth Bay on lighthouse-topped South Stack (Ynys Lawd) on Holyhead Mountain, expert rock climbers now find their sport where local people formerly harvested gulls’ eggs from the vertiginous ledges.

Anglesey has a wealth of prehistoric remains. On the slopes of Holyhead Mountain, a collection of over 50 hut circles and rectangular enclosures, known as Cytiau’r Gwyddelod (Irishmen’s Huts), are thought to date from the Bronze Age and were still in use in Romano-British times, and many finds indicate the wealth of Iron Age culture on the island.

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