Helsingborg HOTELS

Travel to Helsingborg, - hotels selection and destination guides

You can choose and book suitable hotels in Helsingborg from the TOP Helsingborg HOTELS list or make search for hotels using the form. Our destination guides will provide you with information about Helsingborg life, entertainment, history and other useful things for travel to Helsingborg.

TOP Helsingborg HOTELS

Comfort Hotel Nouveau
Rating: 0
Rates: 162 to 234 
Comfort Hotel Nouveau
Best Western Hotel Helsingborg
Rating: 4
Rates: 112 to 282 
Best Western Hotel Helsingborg
HOTEL MARIA - HELSINGBORG
Rating: n/r
Rates: 139 to 217 
HOTEL MARIA - HELSINGBORG
Scandic Helsingborg North
Rating: 3
Rates: 108 to 129 
Scandic Helsingborg North
SX ELITE HOTEL MOLLBERG
Rating: 3
Rates: 133 to 337 
SX ELITE HOTEL MOLLBERG
HOTEL VIKING
Rating: 2
Rates: 175 to 176 
HOTEL VIKING
BEST WESTERN HOTEL DUXIANA
Rating: n/r
Rates: 104 to 314 
BEST WESTERN HOTEL DUXIANA
Clarion Grand Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 129 to 434 
Clarion Grand Hotel
SX ELITE HOTEL MARINA PLAZA
Rating: 3
Rates: 149 to 337 
SX ELITE HOTEL MARINA PLAZA
StayAt Helsingborg Tornet
Rating: 3
Rates: 117 to 156 
StayAt Helsingborg Tornet
ALL HOTELS in Helsingborg...

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Helsingborg guide

 At HELSINGBORG only a narrow sound separates Sweden from Denmark; indeed, Helsingborg was Danish for most of the Middle Ages, with a castle controlling the southern regions of what is now Sweden. The town's enormously important strategic position meant that it bore the brunt of repeated attacks and rebellions, the Swedes conquering the town on six separate occasions, only to lose it back to the Danes each time. Finally, in 1710, a terrible battle saw off the Danes for the last time, and the battered town lay dormant for almost two hundred years, depopulated and abandoned. Only in the nineteenth century, when the harbour was expanded and the railway constructed, did Helsingborg find new prosperity. Today, the dramatically redeveloped harbour area has breathed new life into this likeable, relaxed town which is well worth a day's stay for its bars, cafes and cosily buzzing atmosphere.

Directly south of the the North Harbour cafe-bars, the strikingly designed Henry Dunker Cultural House , named after the city's foremost industrialist benefactor, aims to provide a full vision of the city's history in context and also houses a theatre and concert hall (ask at the tourist office). East from Hamntorget and the harbours, the massive, neo-Gothic REdhus marks the bottom of Stortorget , the long thin square sloping up to the lower battlements of what's left of Helsingborg's castle, the kA¤rnan or keep (daily: April, May & Sept 9am-4pm; June-Aug 10am-7pm; Oct-March 10am-2pm; 15kr), a fourteenth-century brick tower, the only survivor from the original fortress. The views from the top are worth the entrance fee although you don't miss much from the lower (free) battlements. Off Stortorget, Norra Storgatan contains Helsingborg's oldest buildings, attractive seventeenth- and eighteenth-century merchants' houses with quiet courtyards.

Apart from the Sundbussarna passenger ferry to HelsingEr, which pulls up across an arm of the docks, all ferries , trains and buses arrive at Knutpunkten, the harbourside central terminal . It's just a couple of minutes' walk from here up Stortorget towards KA¤rnen to the tourist office at SA¶dra Storgatan 1 (June-Aug Mon-Fri 9am-8pm, Sat & Sun 9am-5pm; Sept-May Mon-Fri 9am-6pm, Sat 10am-2pm; tel 042/10 43 50, www.visit.helsingborg.se ), which has free city maps and books private rooms at 125kr per person (plus 75kr fee). Otherwise, the cheapest of the central hotels is Linnea , PrA¤stgatan 4 (tel 042/21 46 60; E15-20/$24-32), which drops prices in summer and at weekends. The Villa Thalassayouth hostel (tel 042/21 03 84; E10-15/$16-24; bus #7, or #44 after 7pm) is 4km north along Drottninggatan. For camping , try the waterfront site at Kustgatan REE, 5km southeast; bus #1A or #1B from outside the REdhus.

You shouldn't have any difficulty finding somewhere to eat. Lovely daytime cafes include the classic Fahlmans on Stortorget - try their apple meringue pie - and the charismatic Ebba's Fik , Bruksgatan 20, which is all decked out with authentic 1950s memorabilia. There are plenty of harbour-front bars, though the best laid-back style cafe is the gay-run K & Co , Nedre LEngwinkelsgatan 9, for great muffins, cakes and ciabattas. The cheapest restaurant is the unglamorous Graffitti on the first floor at Knutpunkten.

There are several good clubs , including Sweden's biggest jazz club, Jazz Klubben, Nedre LEngvinkelsgatan 22 (Wed, Fri & Sat), and the noisy, popular Tivoli club, Hamntorget 11, where you can get down to the very latest sounds for a 60kr entrance.

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