Portmeirion
North Wales Gwynedd Porthmadog
- From £70 a night
- Cottages, 2 Hotels, Spa
This iconic North Wales resort and architectural fantasy is a place to stay, be pampered – and get married!
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Best-known for its role as home to 'number 6' in the cult 1960s TV series 'The Prisoner', the idiosyncratic North Wales village of Portmeirion was built by eccentric architect Clough Williams-Ellis between 1925 and 1976, using ‘endangered’ buildings from all over Britain which were brought here and rebuilt, so that the steep slopes on which it's perched, above the beautiful Tremadog Bay, sport every architectural style you could think of. It's like nowhere else you've ever been, yet it will remind you of so many places. Its church towers, squares and fountains are reminiscent of Italy, its grand. columned, neo-classical facades are straight out of Vienna, and are interspersed with clapboard cottages that might be from Kent. But despite the fact that it was built somewhat haphazardly over a fifty-year period, somehow it all fits together. Said to have been inspired in part by the village of Portofino in northern Italy, it's a fantasy, where nothing is quite as it seems – grand palaces turn out to be small bungalows, windows turn out to be brick walls. But it's playful and inventive, the creation of someone fascinated by the possibilities of architecture, and not surprisingly its fanciful incorporation of multiple architectural styles laid the way for the post-modernist architectural movement of the 1980s. As for 'The Prisoner', it still attracts fans of the series, whilst other better-known visitors have included architect Frank Lloyd Wright, for obvious reasons, and less obviously Jools Holland, who was so inspired by the village architecture that he replicated aspects of it in the design of his south London studio.
These days it has reverted to its original function as a private resort, incorporating two hotels (the original Hotel Portmeirion and smaller Castell Deudraeth), a number of self-catering cottages, a spa and a spectacular wedding venue – and of course as an all-round tourist attraction. Wandering the convoluted streets of the village is like entering a particularly scrambled architect's dream, and you could easily enjoy a relaxing half-day admiring the higgledy-piggledy mix of architectural styles, ambling around the various gift shops and enjoying a coffee in the Town Hall. There are also restaurants in both hotels and a fab Italian gelateria, and Portmeirion also encompasses the coast and woodlands beyond, through which there are marked paths, so (unlike number 6) you can get behind the confines of the village. You can buy a day pass for £10, and an annual pass for just double that.
But really there's no substitute for staying here for at least one night. Once the day-trippers have gone home there's really nowhere like it, especially if you make use of the fabulous Mermaid Spa where they offer aromatherapy body massages, facials, seaweed and mud body wraps, as well as the more out-there treatments like aroma, reiki, reflexology and crystal healing. You don't have to be staying in the village to enjoy one of their treatments.
Finally, could there be a more romantic place to get married than Portmeirion? You can hire one of its two hotels for your exclusive use, together with a range of self-catering cottages, so even the biggest wedding parties can be catered for, and the village has four places licensed for civil ceremonies. They host small, intimate ceremonies in the so-called Mirror Room in the resort's main hotel, which has floor-to-ceiling windows looking over the Dywyrd estuary, while at the other end of the scale the village's Town Hall can hold up to 45 and 100 guests respectively. If you have opted to take over the Castell Deudraeth Hotel, then you can use the Ricardo Pearce suite, which has beautiful views of both the gardens and the estuary and its own private balcony.
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Open all year.
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Doubles rooms in the Hotel Portmeirion or Castell Deudraeth from £70 a night; cottages rooms and suites from £220; self-catering cottages from around £1000 to £2000 a week in high season depending on the property.
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