Dolweunydd 4 Star Bed & Breakfast is a small family run business in beautiful Betws-y-Coed, Snowdonia.
Dolweunydd (translates as Tolling/Fee collection). The B&B Hotel is a stone-built late-Victorian building with a Garden Cottage locating only a mile from the Snowdonia National Park Visitor Centre. Opposite is the fast flowing river Llugwy, home to the spectacular Swallow Falls a little further upstream.
This lovely hotel is situated in a quieter area of the village away from the centre yet only a very short stroll to shops, cafes and restaurants. Dolweunydd B&B Hotel is located on the Holyhead Rd (A5), less than a mile from Betws-y-Coed railway station.
Betws-y-Coed translates as the "Prayer house in the woods" and lies in the Snowdonia National Park, set in the picturesque Conwy Valley near the point where the River Conwy is joined by the River Llugwy and the River Lledr, and was founded around a monastery in the late sixth century.
The abbots who settled here chose their location well, close to the Conwy river within the tranquil Gwydyr Forest valley – a fertile and a quiet landscape is the backdrop for their peaceful existence. In the 13th century, Edward I stumbled across the village while plotting a route through the newly conquered region to the coast. It is said the English king deployed 1,000 woodcutters to clear the way through the valley, exposing the village for the first time to the wider world
The 14th Century St. Michael's Church where the yew trees are around five centuries old. It is a historic beautiful and peaceful place surrounded by Gwydir Forest.
The village of Betws y Coed is known as the ‘Gateway to Snowdonia’, and is a popular destination for visitors who want to explore all that the mountainous Snowdonia region has to offer.