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TRAVEL IN COMFORT |
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| Address: 14, Malaya Morskaya Ulitsa, St. Petersburg, 190000 |  |
| Nearest metro: Sadovaya |
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The Petro Palace Hotel has a superb location in the very center of St. Petersburg, just a few steps from St. Isaac's Cathedral, and not much further from Palace Square and the State Hermitage Museum. Nevsky Prospekt, the city's famous central thoroughfare, is a few minutes' walk from the hotel, and visitors will find all the shops, restaurants and bars they need within easy walking distance.
Nevsky Prospekt and Gostiny Dvor Metro Stations are about ten minutes' walk down Nevsky from the Petro Palace. St. Petersburg's mainline stations can all be reached in under half-an-hour by car, and Pulkovo-1 and Pulkovo-2 airports are around 40 minutes' drive from the hotel.
Only five minutes' walk from the Petro Palace stands The Hermitage, the most famous art gallery in Russia, with a vast collection of masterpieces assembled by several generations of Russia's rulers. The Museum is partly housed in the spectacular Winter Palace, where visitors can see works by Da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael and Titian, as well as world-famous collections of Rembrandt, Rubens and the French Impressionists (including Renoir, Cezanne, Manet, Monet and Pisarro) Van Goughs, Matisses and Gauguins, Rodin sculptures and scores of other pearls of world culture.
Five minutes walk will take you to the famous Bronze Horseman, the monument to Peter the Great, founder of the city, erected by Catherine the Great. The subject of one of Pushkin's greatest narrative poems, the statue, by Etienne Maurice Falconet, is a symbol of the power and aspirations of the city's founding father.
Hare Island, which is about quarter-of-an-hour's walk across the Neva River, is the site of the Peter and Paul Fortress, where the city was founded in the early 18th century. Although it never played the defensive role envisaged for it by Peter the Great, the Fortress did have a vital part in the history of the city, both as the final resting place of Russia's emperors - who are buried in the Ss. Peter and Paul Cathedral, with its distinctive soaring gold spire - and, more sinisterly, as the city's prison for political dissidents.
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