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The world’s most unusual hotels

21st November 2007 Print
The world’s most unusual hotels From the cabin of a dockside crane that you can rotate, beds in coffins, tree houses or even two underwater hotels, a new book from Unusual Hotels Of The World provides 224 glossy pages filled with some of the most unusual and exciting accommodation in the world.

View a hotel in a disused US Air Force radar tower in the heart of the equatorial rainforest in Panama; or slide back the roof of your bedroom to gaze at the stars in Chile. Enjoy the solitude of chalets hidden in a Swedish forest or experience just a glimpse of extreme life and rest in an oil rig survival pod in Holland.

Imagine yourself in a nursery rhyme and step into a giant shoe, or as an adventurer in an action movie when you visit a remote igloo, a red cube lost in the countryside, a science fiction decor, a lighthouse, plane, train, chapel or even a prison.

Steve Dobson, co-founder of UHOTW has tracked down some of the most exceptional places on earth for you to stay overnight. Discover these unusual destinations in the pages of this book, with full contact information provided.

Gounusual.com, brings you some of its most unusual hotel discoveries in a glossy 19.5cm x 28.5cm coffee-table book. With 235 colour photos it is priced at rrp£16.99, it is available for immediate distribution exclusively from Gounusual.com.

Prices range from £15 to over £700 per night and he has selected 50 hotels in 23 different countries: Canada, USA, Mexico, Panama, Chile, Brazil, Finland, Sweden, UK, The Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, Spain, Italy, Slovenia, Japan, China, India, New Zealand, Senegal, Kenya.

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The world’s most unusual hotels