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Accommodation in Reykjavik
One of two houses run by "Guesthouse Isafold". Barugata 11 has 12 rooms...
We just resently opened a new luxury guesthouse at Barugata 20, 200 meters away from our orginal guesthouse Isafold...
We offer friendly and personal atmosphere with modern, fresh, and spacious rooms in the heart of Reykjavik...
We are ideally located in the Reykjavik-Laugardalur green area and are within easy access of the airports, city centre, sights, tours and transport...
PÁVI apartments are located in down-town Reykjavik close to all services...
Our Guesthouse occupies a central location in Reykjavik, and is only five minutes walk from the city centre..
The word Alba means morning light, the light at dawn, and is taken from title of a short poem by Ezra Pound.
Nice and cosy bed and breakfast, located in quiet family house area. We offer personal service in a relaxed atmosphere...
Centrally located in Reykjavik near main shops, theatres, museums and transport centres
Guesthouse Sigirdur is a nice and cosy guesthouse with the country side of Reykjavik. I offer personal service.
Garður Inn is only 15 min. walk from the centre of Reykjavik and near the capital´s cultural and entertainment offerings...
Guesthouse Egilsborg is located in a quiet street in the centre of Reykjavík...
Hotel Phoenix is centrally located right on the main street in Reykjavik, Laugavegur, where our guests find the most selection of shops, restaurants and cafés...
Thor Guesthouse is on the fourth floor of the building, located on Skolavordustig 16, Reykjavik, right in the city center.
regional info

The Old Town is centered around the Tjörnin, a small pond on whose shores, Ingólfur Arnarson, founded the original settlement in 874. It is here where both the Town Hall and Alþing, or National Assembly, is located. Contemporary Reykjavík starts east of the Old Town, and features the shopping high street, Laugavegur, and Hallgrímskirkja, an imposing church resembling a chunk of volcanic basalt. The tower of the church is the city's most noticeable structure. Begun in the late 1940s and completed in 1974, the church is named after Iceland's best-known poet, Hallgrímur Pétursson. You can wander its stark, light-filled interior, then take a lift to the top of a 75m-high (246ft) tower which offers superb views of the city. On the lawn is a statue of Leifur Eríksson, triumphantly identified as the 'Son of Iceland, Discoverer of Vinland' (believed to be Newfoundland or Labrador).
Anybody interested in Norse and Icelandic culture should head for the National Museum, which houses objects of religious and folk relics, and tools dating from the period of Settlement. The most renowned is a church door, carved around 1200, which depicts a Norse battle scene, while residing in the basement are nautical and agricultural tools and models of early fishing boats and ingenious farm implements. Immediately behind the museum is the Árni Magnússon Institute, a must-see for Saga fans with a famous collection of works, including the Landnámabók and Njáls Saga.
Budget accommodation, cheap eats and bargain shopping are found in the Old Town area of Reykjavik. For entertainment, there is cinema, cultural performances and light shows (sagas, Settlement and Viking extravaganzas)and also "Runtur", which is a Northern equivalent of pub crawling!
Please add to this at:http://www.world66.com/europe/iceland/reykjavik
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