Four Seasons Hotel Prague
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Veleslavínova 2a/1098
Praha 1
Czech Republic
 
110 00
 
Tel.
 
420 221 427 000
  
Fax.
 
420 221 426 000

Four Seasons Prague

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Attractions
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Four Seasons Hotel Prague > View from hotel roof: Charles Bridge > At Four Seasons, you enjoy a unique vantage point from which to explore the sights, sounds and experiences around you.
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At Four Seasons, you enjoy a unique vantage point from which to explore the sights, sounds and experiences around you. We hope the highlights of local attractions below help simplify your planning. Please let us know how else we can assist you.

Attractions on this page

Art galleries
DOX Centre for Contemporary Art 10 minutes drive
Kampa Museum 15 minutes walk
 
Attractions
Hluboká 2 hours drive
Josefov, the Old Jewish Quarter 5 minutes walk
Karlstejn Castle and Golf Course 45 minutes drive
Konopište 1 hour drive
Krivoklát 1 hour drive
Kutná Hora 1 hour drive
Lidice 30 minutes drive
Nelahozeves Castle 45 minutes drive
Old Royal Palace 20 minutes walk
Plzen (Pilsen) 1 hour drive
Prague Castle 20 minutes walk
Restaurants and Bars 20 minutes walk
Terezín 1 hour drive
The Charles Bridge 5 minutes walk
The Old Town Hall 5 minutes walk
The Old Town Square 5 minutes walk
Wenceslas Square 15 minutes walk
 
Museums
Dvorák Museum 10 minutes drive
Mozart Museum 10 minutes walk
Mucha Museum 20 minutes walk
Museum of Charles Bridge 5 minutes walk
National Technical Museum 10 minutes drive
Prague Museum 20 minutes walk
Smetana Museum 5 minutes walk
The National Museum 10 minutes drive
 
Scenic day trips
Ceský Krumlov 3 hours drive
Karlovy Vary (Carlsbad) 2 hours drive
Karlovy Vary (Carlsbad) and Marianské Lázně (Marienbad) 2 hours drive
Třebíč and Telč 3 hours drive
 
Theatre/Performing arts
Reduta Theatre/Black Theatre 15 minutes walk
Municipal House (Obecní Dum) 15 minutes walk
The Estates Theatre 10 minutes walk
The National Theatre 10 minutes walk
The Rudolfinum 5 minutes walk
The State Opera 10 minutes drive

Art galleries

DOX Centre for Contemporary Art

This living arts centre exhibits Czech and international contemporary art.
Visit this web site

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes drive

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Kampa Museum

Kampa Museum's extensive collection of Central European modern art highlights works by two icons of 20th-century art, František Kupka and Otto Gutfreund. The collection serves as a reminder of the Eastern Bloc period, when the works were created, and contributes to the awareness of modern Czech culture.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 15 minutes walk

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Attractions

Hluboká

Often compared to England's Windsor Castle, mock-Tudor Hluboká is one of the country's most-visited castles. Built in the mid-13th century, this Gothic castle was purchased in 1661 by the Schwarzenberk family and rebuilt as their residence. The grounds include an extensive park and riding school.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 2 hours drive

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Josefov, the Old Jewish Quarter

Josefov, the Old Jewish Quarter, includes the Jewish Museum (Zidovské Museum) as well as seven synagogues. The Gothic Old-New Synagogue, one of the oldest Jewish temples in Europe, is still used for religious services. This complex houses the world's largest collection of Jewish artifacts.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 5 minutes walk
Address Maiselova Street

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Karlstejn Castle and Golf Course

Karlstejn Castle and Golf Course is the most popular attraction in the Czech Republic after Prague itself. This medieval castle sits on a hill and is surrounded by forests. Across the river on another hill is a championship golf course with fine views of the castle.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 45 minutes drive

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Konopište

Konopište is a 17th-century castle and hunting lodge of the Habsburgs. In 1887 it became the property of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, and the interior still contains his furnishings and possessions.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 1 hour drive

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Krivoklát

Krivoklát, a medieval castle surrounded by a forest, has an outstanding Gothic interior. The forest is protected by UNESCO as a “biospheric preservation” area.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 1 hour drive

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Kutná Hora

Kutná Hora is an attractive medieval town, whose main attraction is the magnificent St. Barbara’s Cathedral. There is also a 15th-century castle housing a mining museum with tours down the mineshafts. In the neighbouring village of Sedlec, the church interior is decorated with the bones of 40,000 plague victims.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 1 hour drive

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Lidice

The foundations of several buildings are all that is left of Lidice, the town that Hitler razed in revenge for the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich. The Lidice Memorial Museum documents the fate of the inhabitants.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 30 minutes drive

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Nelahozeves Castle

The town of Nelahozeves features the home of the famous Czech composer, Antonín Dvorák, as well as a Renaissance château built in the late 1500s. The château, which has been in the hands of the Lobkowicz family since 1623, is now home to one of the most magnificent family art collections in Europe (including works by Rubens, Veronese, Breughel the Elder, Cranach, Canaletto and Velasquez). Additional highlights include musical instruments and manuscripts of Beethoven, Mozart, Gluck, Vranicky and others.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 45 minutes drive

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Old Royal Palace

The Old Royal Palace, also part of Prague Castle, has been the home of Bohemian kings since the 13th century. Today it is the official residence of the Czech president.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 20 minutes walk
Address Hradcanske. nam street

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Plzen (Pilsen)

Plzen is the second biggest city in Bohemia, with a pleasant main square, and is most notable for being the home of Pilsner beer. Tours are available of both the brewery and the nearby beer museum.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 1 hour drive

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Prague Castle

Prague Castle, the largest ancient castle in the world, sits on the highest hill in the city. Its courtyards, gardens and cafés make for a fascinating visit. The gigantic St. Vitus Cathedral, part of the castle, towers over the city and took 600 years to build. The cathedral has seen the coronation of more than 30 Bohemian monarchs, many of whom are buried here. The crown jewels of the Bohemian kings and relics of St. Wenceslas, the 10th century Duke of Bohemia, are on display. Visitors can admire the marvellous murals, statues, ceiling frescoes and stained glass.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 20 minutes walk
Address Hradcanske nam. street

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Restaurants and Bars

Since the 1989 Velvet Revolution, many restaurants, bars and clubs have opened. The spectrum for entertainment ranges from high quality luxury restaurants to all kinds of ethnic restaurants, popular beer pubs offering famous Czech-brewed products, as well as a sampling of traditional cuisine. Bars, jazz clubs and discos offer a varied night life.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 20 minutes walk

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Terezín

Originally a 19th-century fortress, Terezín was used as a concentration camp by the Nazis. In 1944 it was falsely presented to visitors from the Red Cross as a model camp. Today, the camp remains as a memorial to those who died there.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 1 hour drive

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The Charles Bridge

The Charles Bridge connects the Old Town with the Lesser Quarter (Malá Strana). The defence towers on either end of the 600-year-old bridge offer a view of the city from above. Lining either side of the pedestrians-only bridge are the statues of 30 saints.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 5 minutes walk
Address Krizovnicka Street

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The Old Town Hall

The Old Town Hall has an extraordinary astronomical clock in its tower, built in the early 1400s – when Prague was one of the largest and most prosperous cities in Europe. The clock is designed to tell time as well as chart the motion of celestial bodies. The top of the tower offers a sweeping view of the city.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 5 minutes walk
Address Staromestské námestí

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The Old Town Square

The Old Town Square, Staromestské námestí, has been the centre of Prague since the 10th century. Buildings with pastel neo-Renaissance façades as well as the Old Town Hall and two cathedrals surround the square. The imposing early-Gothic-style Church of Our Lady before Tyn was built in the 1700s. St. Nicholas Church, a baroque cathedral with a wedding-cake façade, was built in the 1700s.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 5 minutes walk
Address Staromestské námestí

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Wenceslas Square

Wenceslas Square is Prague’s equivalent of the Champs Elysées. Visitors look for world-renowned Bohemian crystal amongst its multitude of shops. The National Museum dominates one end of the square. This vast neo-Renaissance building offers permanent and temporary exhibits of mineralogical, paleontological and zoological collections.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 15 minutes walk
Address Vaclavska námestí

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Museums

Dvorák Museum

One of the most enchanting secular buildings of the Prague Baroque, this red and ochre villa now houses the Antonín Dvorák Museum. On display are Dvorák scores and editions of his works, plus photographs and memorabilia of the great 19th century Czech composer, including his piano, his viola and his desk. The location of this Museum is in the New Town (Nové Mesto) in Ke Karlovu Street 20.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes drive
Address Ke Karlovu 20

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Mozart Museum

Though slightly off the beaten track, the museum is well signposted because of Prague's reverence for Mozart. Bertramka is a 17th century farmhouse, enlarged in the second half of the 18th century to convert it into a comfortable suburban villa. Mozart and his wife Constanze stayed here as guests of the composer Frantisek Dusek and his wife Josefina in 1787, when Mozart was working on Don Giovanni. The villa is best visited in the late afternoon when it is at its most tranquil. During summer recitals take place on the terrace. The Museum is located in the Little Quarter (Malá Strana) in Mozartova Street 169.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes walk
Address Mozartova 169 Street

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Mucha Museum

Opened in 1998, it is the unique museum dedicated to the famous Art Nouveau painter Alfons Mucha, showing a comprehensive cross-section of his work. The Museum is located in Panska Street in the Old Town.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 20 minutes walk
Address Panska Street

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Museum of Charles Bridge

The Museum of Charles Bridge is located in the Monastery of the Knights of the Cross and was opened in 2007 to celebrate the 650th anniversary of the construction of the bridge. The museum takes guests back to the time when the bridge was built, highlighting the history of the bridge and the surrounding area.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 5 minutes walk

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National Technical Museum

Though it tries to keep abreast of all scientific developments, the museum's strength is in its collection of machines from the Industrial Revolution to the present day, the largest of its kind in Europe. The section that attracts the most visitors is the History of Transportation in the vast central hall. This is filled with locomotives, railway carriages, bicycles, veteran motorcars and motorcycles, with aeroplanes and a hot-air ballon suspended overhead. The Photography and Cinematography section is well worth a visit, as is the collection of astronomical instruments. A little bit outside of the city center, in Holesovice in Kostelni street, Prague 7, is the location of the National Technical Museum.
Note: The Museum is temporarily closed due to construction.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes drive
Address Kostelni Street, Prague 7

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Prague Museum

The collection records the history of Prague from primeval times. Its Renaissance facade is rich with stucco and sculptures, and the interior walls are painted with historic views of the city. On display are examples of Prague china and furniture, relics of the medieval guilds and paintings of Prague through the ages. The Museum is located in Na Porící 1554 in the Old Town (Staré Mesto).

Getting there
Estimated travel time 20 minutes walk
Address Na Porici 52 Street

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Smetana Museum

On a spit of land beside the Vltava, a former Neo-Renaissance water-works has been turned into a memorial to Bedrich Smetana, the father of Czech music. The museum contains documents, letters, scores and musical instruments detailing the composer's life and work. Smetana was a fervent patriot and his music helped inspire the Czech national revival. The museum is in Novotneho lavka Street in the Old Town.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 5 minutes walk
Estimated distance from hotel 0.3 kilometres
0.2 miles
Address Novotneho Lavka

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The National Museum

A more dominant site could hardly have been found for the National Museum; its architecture, an overpowering monument to 19th century Czech nationalism with its equally grand interior. A setting for extensive archaeological, natural, historical and cultural collections. Located at one end of Wenceslas Square, this vast Neo-Renaissance building was completed in 1890.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes drive
Estimated distance from hotel 3 kilometres
1.5 miles
Address Vaclavske namesti

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Scenic day trips

Ceský Krumlov

The town and castle of Ceský Krumlov, located on a meander of the river Vltava, are true jewels of architecture concentrated in a small space and are living witnesses to the magnificence of Czech history. The town was first mentioned in historical annals in 1253 and has been added to the UNESCO List of World Cultural Heritage.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 3 hours drive

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Karlovy Vary (Carlsbad)

Karlovy Vary is a spa, nesting deep in a beautiful wooded valley. This world-famous health resort has been in existence for over 600 years. Twelve thermal springs appear from a depth of over 2,000 meters. Also found here is Moser, the makers of elegant glassware and china, and the famous Becherovka, a liqueur produced from 100 herbs - often referred to as ''the 13th healthy spring'' of Karlovy Vary. The 18-hole golf club here is the oldest in the Czech Republic, established in 1904.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 2 hours drive

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Karlovy Vary (Carlsbad) and Marianské Lázně (Marienbad)

The world-famous spa town of Karlovy Vary was founded in the 14th century by King Charles IV and is known for its 12 hot springs. You can also visit the Moser glass factory and a museum dedicated to Becherovka, the national herbal liqueur. The nearby spa town of Marianské Lázně is known for its 40 mineral springs, as well as famous visitors Goethe, Freud, Kafka and King Edward VII. On the way, you can visit the castle of Bečov, where the Shrine of St. Maurus is displayed.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 2 hours drive

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Třebíč and Telč

The Jewish Quarter of Třebíč, which has been on the UNESCO World Heritage List since 2003, is a unique testament to Jewish culture in Moravia. The area still exhibits the historical layout and structure that developed in the limited area between the Jihlava River and the hill of Hradek. The Quarter features cobbled streets, dark nooks, vaulted passages and baroque architecture. An unforgettable view of the roofs of the Quarter is available from Hradek Hill. Třebíč is a two-hour drive from the Hotel. On the way back to Prague, you may also visit the beautiful town of Telč, which has been on the UNESCO World Heritage List since 1992. Highlights include the town square, the picturesque baroque houses in the city centre and the castle of Telč. Telč is a one-hour drive from Třebíč.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 3 hours drive

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Theatre/Performing arts

Reduta Theatre/Black Theatre

Frantisek Kratochvil, a man of many talents and professions - sculptor, painter and graphic artist, actor, film director and clown - is best known for his theatre work. He has enriched the Czech theatre by bringing painting on the stage. He uses this unique form of expression to tell stories from his life, to talk about his observations and opinions, and to make people think. There are no language barriers in these kinds of performances.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 15 minutes walk
Estimated distance from hotel 1.5 kilometres
Address Narodni Street

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Municipal House (Obecní Dum)

The Municipal House (Obecní Dum) is one of the best venues for classical music in Prague. Built at the beginning of the 20th century, it has excellent acoustics and is filled with local art.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 15 minutes walk
Address Namesti Republiky (Square)

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The Estates Theatre

The Estates Theatre (Stavovské divadlo) is one of the finest examples of Neo-Classical elegance in Prague. It is a Mecca for Mozart fans. In 1787 Mozart's opera, Don Giovanni had its debut here with Mozart at the piano conducting the orchestra.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes walk
Address Ovocny trh

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The National Theatre

The opulent National Theatre built in the 19th century in the Neo-Renaissance fashion, is a symbol of the revival of the Czech national identity. It was built to nurture the Czech National Revival Movement, a drive to replace the dominant German culture with home-grown Czech works.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes walk
Estimated distance from hotel 1.5
Address Narodni Street

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The Rudolfinum

The Rudolfinum, now home of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, is an outstanding example of Czech neo-Renaissance style. The curving balustrade is decorated with statues of distinguished Czech, Austrian and German composers and artists. Many of the major concerts of the Prague Spring Music Festival are held here.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 5 minutes walk
Address Krizovnicka Street

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The State Opera

In 1885 the New Town Theatre was pulled down to make way for the present building. Originally it was known as the New German Theatre, built to rival the Czech National Theatre. In 1945 the theatre became the city's main opera house under the name of State Opera.

Getting there
Estimated travel time 10 minutes drive
Estimated distance from hotel 2
Address Wilsonova Street

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