Mälardrottningen Yacht Hotel provides a unique experience aboard an elegant 73-metre yacht, permanently docked at Riddarholmen Island, next to Stockholm’s charming Old Town. It features wonderful views of Riddarfjärden Bay.
Free Wi-Fi is available throughout Mälardrottningen Hotel. Guests stay in cabins, decorated with dark timber finish, carpeting and portholes.
Upon arrival, guests enter the reception via a gangplank into a beautifully designed lobby with teak panelling and nautical décor. The TV lounge is found above the engine room, which can be viewed through the glass floors.
The glassed-in Mälardrottningen Restaurant is found on the fore deck, facing City Hall, and includes an open dining terrace. The bar is set in the former wheelhouse.
Mälardrottningen Yacht Hotel is 500 metres from Gamla Stan Metro Station, and Stockholm Central Station is reached in about 10 minutes’ on foot.
“Fascinating place to stay!
It is very close to the old part of the city and near one of the historic churches. It’s not very easy to reach by public transportation, as there aren’t many bus or metro stops nearby.
Of course, the room is a ship’s...”
P
Paweł
波兰
“Excellent, courteous service!”
Ng
新加坡
“Everything was very good.
The staff were exceptional & helpful.
The buffet breakfast were well supplied with a good variety of Swedish & international food.”
S
Serpil
土耳其
“Perfect location and breakfast. Personels are very helpful. Clean rooms.”
房东信息
9.1
9.1
房东评分
房东评分
When you enter the gangway of Mälardrottningen, you might be walking in the same footsteps of former movie stars, politicians and royals. The ship was built in 1924 for Mr C.K.G Billings, a millionaire from New York, and was at that time the world’s largest diesel driven yacht.
The ship was later bought by the Woolworth-millionaire Frank W. Hutton. Barbara Hutton, the Woolworth heiress received it as a gift from her father on her 18th birthday. Barbara lived an extravagant life among royals and movie stars and in the 1940’s she was married to Cary Grant.
She later sold the ship to the Royal British Navy for one pound sterling.
During the Second World War the ship was anchored very shortly in Panama and later on moved to Norway where she was used as a training ship. During the fifties the ship was used as a passenger ferry between Stockholm and Åbo in Finland.
Since 1982, Mälardrottningen has been at her current location and only leaves the dock for maintenance every fifth year.