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Near the main train station, this 1920s hotel originally housed Orient Express passengers. "Old-world elegant but not stuffy," the neoclassical and Art Deco...more
Le Méridien, which opened in 2006, packs several restaurants, cafés, and barsas well as a seaside infinity pool, spa, private beaches (with...more
see the Dalmatian Coast guide
This is the newest (2003) and most dramatic project from a hotel chain called Maestral with ambitions to revolutionize the Croatian resort scene. Don't...more
see the Dubrovnik guide
It was a red-letter day in May 2005 when the early-19th-century Hotel Imperial was reopened, no matter who was responsible for its renovation. And thankfully,...more
see the Dubrovnik guide
Of all the Dalmatian Islands, Brač is the sportiest. It has first-class windsurfing and kite-boarding, and seems to attract a fair number of young,...more
see the Dalmatian Coast guideWine tourism is big along the Dalmatian coast. After years of catering to oenophile tourists—mainly French—one family with a local vineyard decided...more
see the Dalmatian Coast guide
Hvar Town is a great place to party, sure enough, but even hard-core types might consider taking a night or two off to rest their heads on the tiny island of...more
see the Dalmatian Coast guide
In the height of summer, Hvar begins to feel overrun with noisy Italians, British second-home owners, and German families. Hotel Podstine offers an ideal mix:...more
see the Dalmatian Coast guideAs the farthest continually inhabited island from the mainland, Vis was used as a military base until the early 1990s. That means there are none of the hulking...more
see the Dalmatian Coast guide
Walled, medieval Korčula Town is sometimes (and rightly) referred to as little Dubrovnik: It has much of that bigger city's charm, but on a scale that's...more
see the Dalmatian Coast guide








