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Civic Del Sol
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The end of summer- the end of fun? Autumn is usually associated with work, rain, start of the school year and all the other things we tried to forget about during the summer. But who says you have to forget about having fun? It doesn't matter if it is the middle of October. Just take a few days off from work, or just a weekend and make plans to relax and have fun. Get out of the crowded city and just enjoy a few days in the middle of the nature.Â
Autumn weekend getaway- adored by romantics. If you are a romantic person, surprise your loved one by planning an escapade just for the two of you. Choose a hotel or an inn in the countryside and spend fantastic moments of passion and tenderness. It is said that watching the wonderful colors of an autumn sunset can make you fall in love in an instant. No one can deny that autumn is the most romantic season of the year.
 Long walks in the most fabulous landscape. If go for a hotel in the countryside you will be amazed by the fantastic colors of the autumn nature. It seems like a great painter came and threw his water colors on the trees, making leaves blush in front of such a beauty. Hearing leaves rustle under your shoes is like hearing tender words from your loved one. Hold hands like you are children and take time to admire every inch of the wonderful surroundings. You will definitely become more caring and gentle.
Choose a luxury rural hotel. Hotels in the countryside can offer you all the comfort and luxury you need. Furthermore you get to enjoy the benefits of living in the rural area. You can take deep breathes of fresh air, dine in the garden and listen to the wind whistling through the trees. There are hotels located near the water, like the hotels in Henley on Thames that are decorated wisely to blend in the rural architecture. You can have all the comfort you would have had in the city plus the unique experience of being close to the nature.
Visit the surroundings. Don't hesitate to ask the hotel staff to pack you a picnic basket. Take a blanket with you and enjoy having lunch near the water. Don't worry if it rains. Just cuddle with your loved one in front of the fireplace and listen to the rain drops as they touch the window.
If you are looking for cheap and awesome hotels in Henley on Thames then you can contact The Olde Bell today.
Dull by Design
It had been a fortress, convent, military hospital and prison at different times during its 500-year history. In places the incarcerated had carved their names into the stone, each letter as clear as the day it had been engraved during the height of the Spanish Civil War. Now, though, it was a hotel for transient visitors to a quiet corner of provincial Spain – as culturally different from the crowded beaches of the Costa del Sol as it is possible to be.
Not too long before I had stayed overnight in a very different type of hotel – modernist and design-led, it was the antithesis of the ancient structure in almost every way. Only in that they were both spotlessly clean and impeccably staffed could any parallels be drawn.
The contemporary version might well have littered its blurb with words such as “edgy”, “challenging” and “aesthetic”, but it could have saved ink and webpage space by simply writing “expensive character vacuum”. Not that this would have attracted the “edgy” clientele it could relieve of their cash, but it would at least have been bang-on accurate.
Of course, this is my opinion. And so is the assertion that ‘Design Hotels’ in general are utterly ghastly – monuments to the vanity of a metropolitan elite with more bank accounts than brain cells. By staying in one you’re affirming the superior modishness of their architects, interior designers and owners, as well as paying for the “I saw you coming” price tag décor. My opinion again, obviously.
Naturally, those of us who don’t see their point are, well, missing the point. We’re just not as style-savvy as the avant garde sophisticates – more boil-in-the-bag to their Michelin-starred haute cuisine Or, more likely, we just haven’t bought the bull and recognise pretentious bilge when we see it.
You see, the fundamental problem with ‘design hotels’ is that they frequently meld two of the worst facets of late 20th and early 21st century culture together: meaningless modern art and pompous contemporary architecture. And neither field has produced anything of beauty for as long as I can remember.
Don’t get me wrong, this isn’t to say that they’re completely devoid of talent or impressive work – Anthony Gormley’s Another Place at Crosby near Liverpool, and Sir Norman Foster’s ‘Gherkin’ (Swiss Re building) in London are proof of that. But they are both more impressive rather than out-and-out beautiful.
This certainly isn’t a case of the “shock of the new”; a mitigating plea so often used by proponents of the ultra-modern. It’s more about shockingly childish building design and decorating practice masquerading as the intellectual. The Medieval, Tudor, Jacobean and Georgian periods were separated by many years, but their styles were similarly focused on beauty and craftsmanship. Both of these attributes have abandoned ours. Completely.
Instead, contemporary architects of the “funky” variety have continually concocted incrementally more unsightly structures that go out of date faster than an open tub of yoghurt in Cairo. Platitudes such as 'exciting' and 'challenging' are more important good looks these days.
Gaining succour from their sycophantic mates in trendy city wine bars the world over, they plan and devise bigger and beastlier monuments-to-self to inflict on the bourgeosie - the only measure of success being how many nostrils of the general public they can get up. Museums, civic centres, shopping malls and art galleries (that perennial favourite of condescending arbiters of public funding), are all designed to be as aesthetically ridiculous as possible.
Of course, with so many design hotels being located in previously existing buildings the architectural shambles is generally confined to the interior. We should be thankful for small mercies, I suppose, but they’re still invariably examples of arty-farty cobblers.
I should stress, however, that I don’t have anything against the “boutique hotel” genre. They’re a very different thing, even if one or two have also disappeared up their own modernist fundaments. In fact, I’m all for small, independent places to stay that possess plenty of charm and, in boutiques, one tends to find atmospheres and environments in keeping with the historic fabric of the buildings in which they are situated. In fact, I’ll go as far as to say that I positively adore them.
Furthermore, this isn’t a tirade against the concept of transforming an old building into a hotel and subsequently altering it via installing all the modern facilities the 21st century traveller requires. I like crisp, clean, chic bathrooms as much as anyone else. And minibars.
No. My argument is based on the simple fact that I have never stayed in a modern hotel that has been anything but insipid. In contrast, the ambience of that off-the-beaten track Spanish hotel was magnificent. It didn’t need prints of abstract art or wacky furnishings to provide character because it already possessed it in every rough-hewn stone.
Old buildings are simply more engaging than the new. They exude the same vitality and splendour that made William Wordsworth eulogise about Tintern Abbey ruins and Thomas Gray about his English country churchyard. They add to our everyday experience more than most will ever realise. And that is why I seek them out wherever I travel.
Old is beautiful.
Christian Boulton is the creator of Nights In The Past, a guide to historic places to stay in the UK and Europe.
About the Author
Can I put a cd player in my 94 Honda Civic Del Sol? Crutchfield says it will not fit.?
I have a 1994 Honda Civic Del Sol. My girlfriend just got me a CD player for it. It is a Pioneer DEH-P6800MP. I looked on Crutchfield, and it said it wouldn't fit. Are they wrong? If they are right, is there anything I can do to make it fit?
yes it will fit the problem is that some radios are a lot longer the factory is short by 2 inches and the radio seats inside the box making the radio go INSIDE the dash one more inches
but they are wrong in this case it will fit just remove the metal clicp behind the factory radio and any radio will fit
Diablos civic group announces awards for top Tempe teachers
Two earn Teacher of the Year honor.
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US $77.00