Las Casas de la Judería
Callejón Dos Hermanas 7
41004 Seville (Spain) 

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Hotel services
Restaurante Room service 24 Piscina descubierta Lavandería Wellness Bar / Cafeteria Conserjeria Lounge Bar Solarium Parking

Room services
Minusválidos Habitaciones Climatizadas

Function rooms services
Equipo Audiovisual

 

Description

The Duke of Béjar, protector of Cervantes and a member of one of the most important Spanish noble families, once lived in the Judería, or Jewish Quarter, a humble neighbourhood in Seville.

In this same area, in the working-class Barrio de Santa Cruz, stands the Hotel Las Casas de la Judería, in a superbly-conserved complex of buildings connected by patio courtyards that give the establishment the shape and feel of an authentic Andalusian house, with their brightly-coloured flowers, wrought-iron doors and fountains.

The Hotel las Casas de la Judería enjoys a truly superb location near the Cathedral and the Reales Alcázares. The hotel facilities include outdoor swimming pool and a restaurant specialising in typical Andalusian cuisine.

 

Rooms
habitaciónThe Hotel Las Casas de la Judería has 119 rooms (singles, doubles, doubles with living room, and suites), all decorated in classical style and equipped with all the facilities to be expected of a first-class establishment. Distributed around 30 typical 15th-century Sevillian patios, each and every room in the Hotel Las Casas de la Judería is designed differently to integrate perfectly into the original architecture all around. Some suites have private patio, and all are fully-equipped with comforts including TV, telephone, air conditioning and complete bathroom.
Function rooms
The “Salón del Marqués de Villamanrique” is a piano bar where guests can enjoy live music and where meetings can also be organised. Maximum capacity: 15 people.
  Banquete Cocktail Reunión En "U" Escuela Teatro
Salón del Marqués de Villamanrique 15 15 15 15 15 30
Soportales - - - 20 15 20

 

How to get there


From the Airport, Madrid and Córdoba (A-4)

Entering the city from the motorway, take Avenida de Kansas City. At the end of this avenue, on the right, is Santa Justa railway station and a roundabout, where we turn left, passing in front of the Hotel Occidental.

Go straight on to a large junction, turning right into Avenida Luis Montoto.

At the end of Avenida Luis Montoto, passing the ruins of a Roman aqueduct in the middle, we cross a junction before entering a narrower road, Calle San Esteban. Carry straight on, passing a small square with trees, Plaza de Pilatos (on the right is a large mansion, the Casa de Pilatos).

Turn left into Calle Candilejo (you will see a signpost to the hotel) and go straight along Calle Muñoz y Pavón until you reach Calle San José (passing a school, the “Escuela de Nuevas Profesiones” on the right). The hotel is in the third side street on the left.

From Cadiz

Entering Seville from the motorway, take Avenida de la Palmera into the city. On your left you will see Benito Villamarín stadium and the Hotel Al-Andalus, whilst on the right are several 1920s mansions and the María Luisa Park.

The River Guadalquivir will be on your left, and when you see a bridge over the river, you will come to a roundabout, turning right into Avenida de María Luisa. Passing the equestrian statue of the Cid Campeador and a large roundabout with fountain, continue straight down Avenida Menéndez y Pelayo, passing the Murillo Gardens on your left, followed by a bridge on the right.

The road then leads into Calle Florida on the right, from where we take the first on the right, passing the ruins of a Roman aqueduct on the right.

Crossing the junction with an avenue, we enter a narrower road, Calle San Esteban. Carry straight on, passing a small square with trees, Plaza de Pilatos (on the right is a large mansion, the Casa de Pilatos).

Turn left into Calle Candilejo (you will see a signpost to the hotel) and go straight along Calle Muñoz y Pavón until you reach Calle San José (passing a school, the “Escuela de Nuevas Profesiones” on the right). The hotel is in the third side street on the left.

From Málaga-Granada

Entering Seville from the motorway, take Avenida de Luis Montoto towards the centre (you will see signs to the hotel here).

At the end of Avenida Luis Montoto, passing the ruins of a Roman aqueduct in the middle of this avenue, turn left into Avenida Menéndez Pelayo.

Go straight on, past a public car park on the right. The hotel is in Calle Santa María La Blanca, next to this car park.

From Huelva, Extremadura and Portugal

From the dual carriageway, enter the city from the exit signposted “SEVILLA CENTRO CIUDAD” or “Avda. Cristo de la Expiración”, crossing the river over the bridge and then turning right into Calle Arjona, which runs into Paseo de Cristóbal Colón, parallel to the river.

Keep straight on, passing the Torre del Oro tower on your right, by the river. Then turn first left and then right, passing the Palacio de San Telmo.

At the end of this road, you come to a large square, turning left around the equestrian statue of the Cid Campeador and passing another large square with a fountain in the middle. Keep straight ahead until forced to turn right into Calle Florida on the right, after which we take the first on the left.

Crossing the junction with an avenue, we enter a narrower road, Calle San Esteban. Carry straight on, passing a small square with trees, Plaza de Pilatos (on the right is a large mansion, the Casa de Pilatos).

Turn left into Calle Candilejo (you will see a signpost to the hotel) and go straight along Calle Muñoz y Pavón until you reach Calle San José (passing a school, the “Escuela de Nuevas Profesiones” on the right). The hotel is in the third side street on the left.

From Ronda

Entering Seville from the Ronda road, passing through Utrera, go towards the city centre, passing through two roundabouts and keeping straight on until Avenida Diego Martínez Barrios. Reaching the first junction, you will see a shoe shop, “Zapatos Pasarela”, on the right. Keep straight on, and the avenue runs into Avenida San Francisco Javier.

Go straight on until the next important junction, turning left into Avenida Eduardo Dato. Go straight ahead, over the bridge, then turn left. Go straight on once more, past a public car park on the right. The hotel is in Calle Santa María La Blanca, right next to this car park.

By car towards the AVE high speed railway station. Then follow the signs to Santa Cruz and La Giralda.


Distance from hotel
     
Airport: 5 km City centre: 25 mts Trade Fair: 2 km
Railway station: 500 mts Bus stop: 200 mts Golf club: 5 km

 

Destination information: Seville

SevillaSevilla tiene un color especial…” (“Seville has a special colour…”) That is how Los del Río immortalised the Andalusian capital in song. A city rich in customs and traditions that enjoys a magnificent climate and boasts rich historic and monumental heritage, Seville, with its friendly, hospitable inhabitants, is a leading tourist destination at world level.

Bathed by the River Guadalquivir, Seville is divided into several barrios or neighbourhoods, humble but embellished by many historic monuments and buildings. Particularly outstanding is the Santa Cruz neighbourhood.

A good starting point for a tour of this magnificent city is by a visit to La Giralda, a tower originally part of a 12th-century mosque. La Giralda commands views of Seville Cathedral, the third-largest in the world. Nearby stands the Moorish fortress, or Alcázar, built in Mudéjar style in the12th century.

We can also admire the city’s artistic heritage in its 16 museums, amongst which the most outstanding are the Museum of Fine Art and the Archaeological Museum.

But to really discover Seville’s popular culture and folklore, we need to visit its different neighbourhoods, such as the Barrio de Santa Cruz, which is of Arabic and Jewish origin, where we can visit the beautiful Real Maestranza bullring, which dates back to the 18th century.

No tour of the Andalusian capital would be complete without a visit to the María Luisa Park and the Murillo Gardens, pausing in Plaza de España, with its Art Nouveau monuments built for the First Universal Exhibition, bordered by an artificial lake and two spectacular towers.

Overlooking the River Guadalquivir stands the Torre del Oro, an octagonal tower built in Moorish times which watches over the Andalusian capital. Nearby is the emblematic Puente de Triana, a 19th-century iron bridge leading into the colourful working-class neighbourhood of Triana.

Another of Seville’s outstanding attractions is its cuisine, characterised by simple dishes given intense flavour by the condiments used to season them. Typical local dishes include: pescaíto frito, fish fried in plenty of olive oil; gazpacho, a delicious cold vegetable soup; huevos a la flamenca, eggs with tomato and chorizo sausage: cocido andaluz (stew); and rabo de toro (bull’s tail) amongst many more delicious Sevillian delicacies.

But Seville is also renowned the world over for its tapas, small portions of typical regional dishes, such as pinchos morunos (spicy meat on a skewer), small pieces of batter-fried cod and snails. And for dessert, Torrijas de Semana Santa, based on an Arabic dish, or Yemas de San Leandro, typical sweet whose main ingredients are egg yolk and sugar.

Easter is the most outstanding religious festivity Seville, which also hosts the popular six-day April Fair (Feria de Abril), whose origins go back to a cattle fair.

Finally, amongst the city’s bustling markets, the best-known is the Rastro Sevillano flea market.

 

Experiencias