| Christina |
May 17th, 2003 07:00 PM |
I've stayed in one in Vienna and it wasn't a B&B as I call that term (it was not someone's house). They can be just one-two floors in an older building and run more by a family, as ira says, although they can certainly hire people to help. The one I was in was on the 2-3 floors of a building that also housed apartments and maybe some professional offices--a hotel wouldn't be like that. It had most of the things a 2-3* hotel would, though, including breakfast room, front desk, etc. Given it's odd location not off the street, there was some special procedure to get in at night, or maybe I was given a doorkey. They are rated a little lower than hotels (ie, a 4* pension in Vienna is not the same level of amenties etc as a 4* hotel, more like a 3* hotel) and can be cheaper. Most of the places I've been that had them (Krakow, Prague, Vienna), they would be listed on hotel booking sites along with the hotels, but there wouldn't be a reason to have a web site only for pensions really. In Vienna, there is one company that actually owns a couple pensions, so that's sort of like some hotels. They have them in Italy, also, and I think Spain but not sure what they are called there. Other countries too, I'm sure.
They don't really have them in France, though--anything that would fall into the same type as what I stayed at in Vienna would just probably be called a 2* hotel. In rural areas, it would be more like a B&B (chambres d'hote). There are a few places called pensions in Paris, but they are more like rooming houses, not for very short-term tourists.
|