Vous pensez qu'il y a une erreur sur ce lieu ?
Signaler une erreur
Vos retours sont importants pour nous. Si vous avez remarqué une erreur concernant ce lieu, merci de nous en informer pour que nous puissions la corriger.
Propriétaire de ce lieu ?
Nous récupérons automatiquement les informations disponibles sur votre lieu. Si jamais celles-ci ne sont pas correctes, connectez-vous gratuitement sur notre tableau de bord pour les modifier et bonus, accédez à vos statistiques détaillées.
Ce qu'en disent les utilisateurs
Autres lieux à voir autour
"Enjoyed a drink in the small bar on the “street”. Did not stay at the hotel itself."
@rls6993
"The Melegran, Rovinj, Croatia Price: Rooms from about £94 per night Croatia’s horizons stretch a whole lot further than Dubrovnik and the hands-in-the-air beach-party season. The north-western peninsula of Istria is now regarded as a Tuscan-style sensation stocked with fresh seafood, snuffled truffles and quite brilliant wine. Plenty of which ends up on the tables in Rovinj, the coastal citadel that’s every bit as dramatic as Saint-Malo, with the happenchance street theatre of a Fellini film. But while large hotels rise along the shore, the old town has lacked a smart, small-scale base from which to explore the cobblestoned lanes. The Melegran is owned by Aussie-born Adrian Calvert and Lea Lazarić, whose grandfather was mayor of nearby Pula and a frequent guest of President Tito. Both are well aware of the sort of versatility and service that many outfits in Croatia lack. While the walls are siege-proof thick, the couple have deployed a playful design that draws on mid-century riffs, Love Heart pinks and blues, Designers Guild prints and faux foliage. The main building is a former sculptor’s house, with a hole-in-the-wall bar-reception that rustles up pomegranate cocktails; there’s also a scattering of apartments nearby – the two-bedroom mezzanine suite even has its own roof terrace. Front-desk star Dragana Cestar will fix island voyages, vineyard tours and restaurants (first-timers should head to La Puntulina for oysters and Istrian fizz at sunset). With a spa retreat in spring, and a new space for events and talks, this spot is carving out its own cultural scene while remaining rooted in the medieval atmosphere of one of the country’s most individual towns. Fiona Kerr"
@
"café de rue trop mignon / calme"
@