Hotels in Santa Susanna, Spain
10 of 13 hotels in Santa Susanna
Further down the road to Malgrat de Mar have good restaurants
All inclusive recommended.
2 Reviews
144 Reviews
Traveller Rating
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Excellent20
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Very Good56
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Good44
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Average19
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Poor5
Review Overview
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Eating Out
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Nightlife
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Beaches
18 years 6 months ago
The resort is good for familys very clean allways some thing to do, very good beach not very good on the food selection any where not much to choose.
18 years 7 months ago
It was early in the year so resort most prob would of been better in the higher season.
18 years 7 months ago
Nothing much to do for families apart from the beach and looking in souvenier shops.
18 years 7 months ago
The resort is very clean,I did not go onto the beach(no comment).
The bars were always friendly,with different entertainment if you look around.
The bars were always friendly,with different entertainment if you look around.
18 years 7 months ago
The resort is clean and tidy, and there is entertainment to be found, but not so much in April, when we went. The beach is shingle but is clean. I wiil certainly visit this resort again.
18 years 7 months ago
Santa Susanna is quite and beuatiful. Tends to get rather rowdy at Malgrat end which is a shame.
18 years 11 months ago
This coast line of Spain is quite green. As we trundled on towards our destination the grass and surrounding trees and fields were covered in a light frost, something I had not expected. We finally arrived at our destination around 11:30 am at the Aqua Onabrava Hotel in Santa Susanna. A four star hotel with nice spacious rooms this was to be our home for the next few days. In fact I write this article from the hotel computer whilst I am waiting for lunch to be served. The hotel is faultless. The food and the service excellent. My only criticism would be the fact that the swimming pool and the gym are available but for an extra charge.
The beach is nearby and the promenade and surrounding area is spotlessly clean and well maintained. The beach itself is very impressive and stretches for miles and miles in either direction. I have some photos that I will show you later when I get back.
As with any package holiday the tours are available at a premium. Rather than fight our way through the public transport maze we paid for our day trip to Barcelona ( 120 Euros for four of us which is about 85 pounds ) and also the spectacular monastary at Montserrat, more on this later.
Outside the hotel the lemon trees were bearing their fruit and the hotel pool glistened in the sunshine, spotlessly clean but unused of course due to the chilly weather. The mornings are cool and similar to mornings in the UK at this time of year but the winter sun soons warms the place up and the bright and cheerful weather is a refreshing change.
On the second day we went to Barcelona. What a splendid city. It is both modern and ancient and home to around 4 million people. Thats about 10 per cent of the population of Spain!. This area is called Catalonia. Catalan as well as Spanish is spoken. It was from Barcelona that the Spanish Armada was built. Many of the old villas surrounding the city are from the rich colonial history of the region and its profits from the slave trade and Spanish colonies. Barcelona sprawls for miles and miles. It is actually a collection of villages all merged into one big city.
Perhaps one of the most impressive quarters is the area around where the Olympics took place. This modern and tastefully designed complex includes some spectacular architecture and landscaping as well as parkland and a beautiful harbour. The apartments once used for the Olympic athletes have now been sold off privately and the area has settled into a well used and prosperous suburb of Barcelona. Money has been spent here and the city is still being redeveloped and enhanced. A copy of the gherkin building in London is a prominent feature in Barcelona too.
Our first stop was to the mountain park of Montjuic with its fantastic city views and elegant gardens. This park contains a host of buildings from palaces to sports installations which were built for the Olympics. Although a little misty I managed to get some good photos from the hill overlooking the harbour.
We then drove past the Estadi Olimpic from Placa d´Europa and the Palau Sant Jordi. The Olympic stadium was styled on a previous stadium which dated from 1936 but which was completely rebuilt for the 92 games. This stadium seats 75,000.
Our tour bus dropped us off near the city centre and we ventured down ´The Rambla´, the most popular street in the city of Barcelona. This is a long street full of shops, street entertainers dressed in a variety of costumes and standing motionless until they are tipped. A busy fruit and veg market is both colourful and amazing in its displays of food and produce.
If you follow ´The Rambla´down to the end it comes out at the seafront by the Colombus Monument and the old ship building maritime buildings. A walk along the promenade eventually takes you back to the harbour. There are plenty of magnificent traditional Spanish buildings here.
We had lunch at the Placa de Catalunya, a big square in the heart of Barcelona and its shopping centre. This square is also where ´The Ramblas´start from the city centre. We passed the Casa Mila la Pedrera, a fine example of Gaudi´s work. From here we moved on to the Sagrada Familia, a grand church ( of cathedral proportions ) that has been under construction for the last 100 years and is still being built today. This is a stunning masterpiece and one of the finest buildings I have ever seen. The size and scale of the project is incredible.
Barcelona is truly one of the most impressive cities I have ever visited. Its long avenues and ornate buildings are a pleasure. The thought and design that has gone into this city is astounding.
The language of this area of Spain is Catalonian. Bones Festes - Happy Christmas. The language is widely used and closer to French than it is to Spanish. This region used to be famous for its textile exports but due to cheap imports from India and China the industry has suffered to the extent that it only amounts to some ten per cent of its former glory. As you move inland away from the centre of Barcelona you find extensive factories and industrial output on a grand scale. This is a wealthy region of Spain where land and house prices have increased dramatically in recent years. The outlying fields are fertile and the countryside green and rich in colours at this time of the year. Dotted around the fields are large greenhouses for strawberry production.
The road network is excellent although you have to pay a toll. Also worth noting is the public transport system. Buses and trains are cheap, on time and very efficient.
Our second tour or day trip was to Montserrat about half an hour inland from Barcelona. With breathtaking scenic views and dramatic rock formations this mountain is home to a huge monastry built near the summit. The logistics of building such a complex can not have been easy and the visitor will be amazed at the size of the complex and its extensive outbuildings, roads, walkways and shops. It is worth taking the tram to the very top of the mountain where the views are even more impressive. At the summit there is a small church and further buildings of interest.
The rest of our holiday was spent walking around the Santa Susanna locality and the nearby country park. Despite the fact that this is a new holiday resort there is plenty to do and see nearby. For those a little more adventurous you can catch the train and two stops down the line you are in Blanes, a large seaside resort with a wonderful sandy beach and plenty of shopping. The train station is stuck on the outskirts so you have to catch a bus from the station to the city centre which is easy enough.
This five day break has flown by. I would definately spend Christmas away again. On Christmas day the hotel served a traditional Christmas dinner with champagne and wine flowing for both Christmas eve and Christmas day. They provided evening entertainment and quite reasonable bar prices. I would recommend this hotel to anyone.
Alas this holiday is drawing to a close as we await the dreaded return coach journey. I know how battery hens must feel cooped up in their pens day after day.
The beach is nearby and the promenade and surrounding area is spotlessly clean and well maintained. The beach itself is very impressive and stretches for miles and miles in either direction. I have some photos that I will show you later when I get back.
As with any package holiday the tours are available at a premium. Rather than fight our way through the public transport maze we paid for our day trip to Barcelona ( 120 Euros for four of us which is about 85 pounds ) and also the spectacular monastary at Montserrat, more on this later.
Outside the hotel the lemon trees were bearing their fruit and the hotel pool glistened in the sunshine, spotlessly clean but unused of course due to the chilly weather. The mornings are cool and similar to mornings in the UK at this time of year but the winter sun soons warms the place up and the bright and cheerful weather is a refreshing change.
On the second day we went to Barcelona. What a splendid city. It is both modern and ancient and home to around 4 million people. Thats about 10 per cent of the population of Spain!. This area is called Catalonia. Catalan as well as Spanish is spoken. It was from Barcelona that the Spanish Armada was built. Many of the old villas surrounding the city are from the rich colonial history of the region and its profits from the slave trade and Spanish colonies. Barcelona sprawls for miles and miles. It is actually a collection of villages all merged into one big city.
Perhaps one of the most impressive quarters is the area around where the Olympics took place. This modern and tastefully designed complex includes some spectacular architecture and landscaping as well as parkland and a beautiful harbour. The apartments once used for the Olympic athletes have now been sold off privately and the area has settled into a well used and prosperous suburb of Barcelona. Money has been spent here and the city is still being redeveloped and enhanced. A copy of the gherkin building in London is a prominent feature in Barcelona too.
Our first stop was to the mountain park of Montjuic with its fantastic city views and elegant gardens. This park contains a host of buildings from palaces to sports installations which were built for the Olympics. Although a little misty I managed to get some good photos from the hill overlooking the harbour.
We then drove past the Estadi Olimpic from Placa d´Europa and the Palau Sant Jordi. The Olympic stadium was styled on a previous stadium which dated from 1936 but which was completely rebuilt for the 92 games. This stadium seats 75,000.
Our tour bus dropped us off near the city centre and we ventured down ´The Rambla´, the most popular street in the city of Barcelona. This is a long street full of shops, street entertainers dressed in a variety of costumes and standing motionless until they are tipped. A busy fruit and veg market is both colourful and amazing in its displays of food and produce.
If you follow ´The Rambla´down to the end it comes out at the seafront by the Colombus Monument and the old ship building maritime buildings. A walk along the promenade eventually takes you back to the harbour. There are plenty of magnificent traditional Spanish buildings here.
We had lunch at the Placa de Catalunya, a big square in the heart of Barcelona and its shopping centre. This square is also where ´The Ramblas´start from the city centre. We passed the Casa Mila la Pedrera, a fine example of Gaudi´s work. From here we moved on to the Sagrada Familia, a grand church ( of cathedral proportions ) that has been under construction for the last 100 years and is still being built today. This is a stunning masterpiece and one of the finest buildings I have ever seen. The size and scale of the project is incredible.
Barcelona is truly one of the most impressive cities I have ever visited. Its long avenues and ornate buildings are a pleasure. The thought and design that has gone into this city is astounding.
The language of this area of Spain is Catalonian. Bones Festes - Happy Christmas. The language is widely used and closer to French than it is to Spanish. This region used to be famous for its textile exports but due to cheap imports from India and China the industry has suffered to the extent that it only amounts to some ten per cent of its former glory. As you move inland away from the centre of Barcelona you find extensive factories and industrial output on a grand scale. This is a wealthy region of Spain where land and house prices have increased dramatically in recent years. The outlying fields are fertile and the countryside green and rich in colours at this time of the year. Dotted around the fields are large greenhouses for strawberry production.
The road network is excellent although you have to pay a toll. Also worth noting is the public transport system. Buses and trains are cheap, on time and very efficient.
Our second tour or day trip was to Montserrat about half an hour inland from Barcelona. With breathtaking scenic views and dramatic rock formations this mountain is home to a huge monastry built near the summit. The logistics of building such a complex can not have been easy and the visitor will be amazed at the size of the complex and its extensive outbuildings, roads, walkways and shops. It is worth taking the tram to the very top of the mountain where the views are even more impressive. At the summit there is a small church and further buildings of interest.
The rest of our holiday was spent walking around the Santa Susanna locality and the nearby country park. Despite the fact that this is a new holiday resort there is plenty to do and see nearby. For those a little more adventurous you can catch the train and two stops down the line you are in Blanes, a large seaside resort with a wonderful sandy beach and plenty of shopping. The train station is stuck on the outskirts so you have to catch a bus from the station to the city centre which is easy enough.
This five day break has flown by. I would definately spend Christmas away again. On Christmas day the hotel served a traditional Christmas dinner with champagne and wine flowing for both Christmas eve and Christmas day. They provided evening entertainment and quite reasonable bar prices. I would recommend this hotel to anyone.
Alas this holiday is drawing to a close as we await the dreaded return coach journey. I know how battery hens must feel cooped up in their pens day after day.
19 years 1 month ago
An alround good place with much to do day and night. a choice of fantastic bars and nightclubs some of which were open as late as 5/5.30 a must for all of the party going people, beaches are spaceious with a great deal to do, (including having clean water to swim in)
19 years 1 month ago
santa susanna is a resort for the quiet sort of holiday maker,definetly not for families,but if one was to walk,catch the bus,or train to malgrat you will find all the things you will need for a holiday with children.there is the train station which will take you any where in the costa brava for days out and it is very cheap too.as i was in malgrat earlier in the year and promised i would try to get back i spent a lot of time in the 'rovers return'with ronnie tom goerdy and the girls.well worth a visit.i couldn't spent as much time as i wanted owing to the distance from the hotel to the rovers.ok getting there but it was a case of taxis to get back to s/susanna.
19 years 2 months ago
Santa Susanna seems a very nice place. Down by the beach there is the main street which is packed with bars and shops. There seems to be alot of hotels by the front that have entertainment going on whom welcome you to join them.
The beach is so so. It is man made so it isnt really sand but they do have life gaurd stations that are manned at all times and seem to be very aware of what is going on. The water sports arent great. They have 1 Jetski and is quite expensive.
The beach is so so. It is man made so it isnt really sand but they do have life gaurd stations that are manned at all times and seem to be very aware of what is going on. The water sports arent great. They have 1 Jetski and is quite expensive.
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