Here we list those members
who provide a wide selection of
properties for the
business traveller or tourist - from
budget to luxury
hotels, bed and breakfasts and guest
house accommodation.
They offer ideal
accommodation for any visitor to Downham Market.
Timbers is a lovingly restored and renovated barn complex,surrounded by rolling countryside. With sixteen charming ensuite bedrooms, including a family room & a bridal suite. The ideal place to stay for exploring our many Norfolk attractions, including the Queen's country residence at Sandringham, Oxborough Hall, Denver Windmill & the North Norfolk coast.
Rating: Self Assessed | Hotel | 3 Stars Rooms: 16
Room facilities: Trouser press | Tea/coffee facilities | Freeview | TV | Alarm clock | Rooms from: £55 Mobility info: There is one ground floor room which has full wheelchair access and a specially adapted bathroom for wheelchair users.
Formerly a coaching inn and farm complex once serving the ford to the village of Hilgay, renovations have retained the original character of the diminishing Olde England. The non smoking dining room has impressive oak beams and an inglenook fireplace. Spacious bedrooms, all with en suite bathrooms, have colour television, coffee and tea making facilities, and two have four poster beds.
Rating: AA | Bed & Breakfast | 3 Stars Rooms: 4
Room facilities: Tea/coffee facilities | Non-smoking | TV | Rooms from: £30 Mobility info: Two of our bedrooms are on the ground floor.
High Street, Downham Market, Downham Market, Norfolk, PE38 9HF
Welcome to the Castle Hotel Downham Market. The Castle Hotel is currently the highest 2 star AA rated hotel in East Anglia. It is also a 2 star RAC/ETB. A friendly family run Hotel which offers first class accommodation and a wide range of services and facilities. We have recently had some areas of the hotel refurbished, such as the honeymoon suite.
Rating: AA | Hotel | 2 Stars Rooms: 12
Room facilities: Tea/coffee facilities | Non-smoking | Internet | TV | Rooms from: £50
Lord Nelson went to school at Downham Market,
which was once a market town based around the sale of horses. In the town
centre there's a neo-Gothic clock tower dating back to 1878, whilst the
Church of St. Edmund has a spire and a Gothic crucifix. Nearby is the 15th
century moated mansion, Oxburgh Hall. The neighbouring village of Denver has
a tower windmill, a 13th century church and a cast iron clocktower with a
glass chandelier.