Libre
Soutien
Étudiants du collège Bookbag mignon sac à bandoulière grande capacité sac à dos avec pendentif Oxford tissu sac à dos de voyage en plein air
Highlights
Enjoy one of the most famous thermal spa baths in Europe, the Gellért Spa
Be amazed by the beautiful Art Nouveau building with numerous Art-Nouveau furnishings, artistic mosaics and sculptures.
The Gellért Spa has 13 mixed baths, no gender separation
In addition, you can also enjoy steam rooms, saunas and a Roman-style swimming pool
Ideal for families and couples
Ticket Includes
Skip the Line entrance to the Gellért Spa
Access to 13 Mixed Baths
Access to steam rooms, saunas and a Roman-style swimming pool
Private cabin use
Spa Kit:
I Love Spa Towel
Flip Flops
Swimming Cap
2 in 1 shampoo and shower gel
0,5 l Ave still mineral water
Add-on
Optional Pick-up Service :
An additional return transfer can be booked from your accommodation to the spa.
Ticket Excludes
Pick-up Service (only included if purchased as an add-on)
Massage (can be booked here)
Paradas Tour Eiffel: Port de la Bourdonnais. Al pie de 1.710 escaleras de un gran monumento francés. Musée d'Orsay: Quai de Solférino. Al lado del museo, una parada en el mundo del Impresionismo. St-Germain-des-Prés: Quai Malaquais.Al lado del Institut de France, el París de los artistas y los intelectuales. Notre-Dame: Quai de Montebello. La armonía arquitectural de la catedral y la atmosfera del Barrio Latino. Station Jardin des Plantes / Cité de la Mode: La estación fue trasladada al pie de la Cité de la Monde, a solamente 10 minutos caminando de su original localización. Hotel de Ville: Cerca de Pont d'Arcole. La parada muestra la riqueza y el contrasto del distrito Marais y el Centro Pompidou. Louvre: Entre Pont Royal y Pont du Carrousel. Muestra un barrio donde la historia y la historia del arte de convierten en una. Champs-Elysées: Cerca de Pont Alexandre III. El mítico Paris - el Grand Palais, el Petit Palais y Avenue Montaigne. Beaugrenelle: situado en el 15º arrondissement, abierto a diario de las 10:00 hasta la 20:45h. Un lugar identificado por la relajación y la compra.
The Map Room The Map Room came into use on the very first day that the Cabinet War Rooms were ready for occupation and remained the heart of the site throughout the war. The room was staffed twenty-four hours of every day, from August 1939 to August 1945. The principal function of the Map Room was to act as a round the clock central point for information about the war. The War Cabinet Room This was the inner sanctum of British Government, the room used for meetings of the Prime Minister, a select few ministers and advisers of his War Cabinet and his Chiefs of Staff. 115 meetings of the War Cabinet took place and momentous decisions were taken in this room. The scratched arms of the seat in which Churchill sat bear witness to the tensions of those crucial meetings at critical moments of the war. Churchill's Room Although his room in the Cabinet War Rooms boasted comforts of a higher standard than anywhere else in the complex, Winston Churchill preferred not to sleep there. He used his room at the Cabinet War Rooms for visits to the Map Room and for business, when forced to meet underground. He also delivered four of this wartime speeches from here, including his 11 September 1940 speech, warning of Hitler's plans to wage a war of terror against the United Kingdom. The Transatlantic Telephone Room The Transatlantic Telephone Room, to which a huge scrambler 'Sigsaly' was connected, created the original hot-line for allowing Churchill and the American President to conduct their vital strategic discussions in complete security. Like all the rooms in the complex, this originally had a more humble purpose - it was once a store for brooms and domestic equipment. It was adapted in mid-1943 to house this particularly secret installation. The Churchill Museum The Churchill Museum is divided into five chapters, spanning all ninety years of Churchill's life. To allow an easy transition from the historical context of the Cabinet War Rooms, the story begins on 10 May 1940 with Churchill's appointment as Prime Minister. The visitor can then explore his later years, his childhood, his early political career and finally the period known most famously as the 'Gathering Storm'. Facilities The Switchroom Café is a great place to relax with a range of hot and cold food freshly prepared on the premises, along with a variety of beverages on offer. Open 7 days a week from 10:00 until 17:00, the café is located halfway through the tour but visits to the café can be taken at any time. The café also houses interesting photographic artefacts from the Second World War to view. All visitors are provided with a free personal Acoustic guide sound guide, available in English (adult, family and visually impaired version), French, German, Italian, Spanish, Hebrew, Dutch and Mandarin. Plus family and kids tours