Current:Home > reviewsSurpassing:Abandoned slate mine in Wales now world's deepest hotel -TradeBridge
Surpassing:Abandoned slate mine in Wales now world's deepest hotel
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-11 12:03:01
Snowdonia,Surpassing Wales — The Welsh countryside offers stunning vistas, with rugged peaks framing sweeping landscapes. But from the Deep Sleep Hotel, you'll see none of that, but it's no less spectacular, and getting there is half the adventure.
At check-in, guests receive a hard hat, head lamp, boots and a mountain guide.
The journey — about 1,400 feet underground to the world's deepest hotel in the north Wales region of Snowdonia — takes nerve.
Guests descend into dark caverns, navigate flooded tunnels, zip-line across a vast abyss and squeeze through some pretty tight places.
For more than 200 years, miners extracted slate from Mount Snowdon, much of the work done by candlelight. In the process, they created a maze of tunnels.
"It goes miles that way, and it goes miles that way," explains guide Jeanine Cathrein. "Yeah, it's a huge place."
The exhausting journey to the Deep Sleep Hotel, which first opened in April 2023, takes about four hours. Guests arrive at the hotel to find climate-controlled cabins, and groundwater helps generate electricity.
There's Wi-Fi and a bathroom. Running water comes from a spring, but there is no shower.
Dinner comes in a pouch.
"You can't pass this up," guest Mark Green said.
It's a "once in a lifetime opportunity," guest Sam Frith added.
The price tag to get some deep sleep in a cabin for two runs nearly $500 a night.
- In:
- United Kingdom
Ian Lee is a CBS News correspondent based in London, where he reports for CBS News, CBS Newspath and CBS News Streaming Network. Lee, who joined CBS News in March 2019, is a multi-award-winning journalist, whose work covering major international stories has earned him some of journalism's top honors, including an Emmy, Peabody and the Investigative Reporters and Editors' Tom Renner award.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (547)
Related
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Von Miller still 'part of the team' and available to play vs Chiefs, Bills GM says
- Iran arrests a popular singer after he was handed over by police in Turkey
- 4 more members of K-pop supergroup BTS to begin mandatory South Korean military service
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- John Lennon's murder comes back to painful view with eyewitness accounts in Apple TV doc
- Boy killed after being mauled by 2 dogs in Portland
- Hilarie Burton Says Sophia Bush Was The Pretty One in One Tree Hill Marching Order
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Atmospheric river brings heavy rain, flooding to Pacific Northwest
Ranking
- Bodycam footage shows high
- 'DWTS' crowns Xochitl Gomez, Val Chmerkovskiy winners of the Len Goodman Mirrorball trophy
- Taylor Swift caps off massive 2023 by entering her Time Person of the Year era
- How Tony Shalhoub and the 'Monk' creator made a reunion movie fans will really want to see
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Major foundation commits $500 million to diversify national monuments across US
- Republican prosecutor will appeal judge’s ruling invalidating Wisconsin’s 174-year-old abortion ban
- 160 funny Christmas jokes 'yule' love this holiday season
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Louisiana governor-elect names former gubernatorial candidate to lead state’s department of revenue
Pope says he’s ‘much better’ after a bout of bronchitis but still gets tired if he speaks too much
Biden backs Native American athletes' quest to field lacrosse team at 2028 Olympics
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
Environmentalists say Pearl River flood control plan would be destructive. Alternative plans exist
Texas Court Strikes Down Air Pollution Permit for Gulf Coast Oil Terminal
Volkswagen-commissioned audit finds no signs of forced labor at plant in China’s Xinjiang region