enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Premier Inn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premier_Inn

    Premier Inn Limited is a British limited service hotel chain and the UK's largest hotel brand, with more than 800 hotels, with over 72,000 rooms. It operates hotels in a variety of locations including city centres, suburbs and airports, competing with the likes of Travelodge and Ibis hotels.

  3. Carleton, Penrith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carleton,_Penrith

    Carleton Village itself is a small line of houses along one side of the A686 road that forms part of the boundary of the town's built up area; at the junction of the A686 and Carleton Road (formerly the A66 road) and a lane leading down to Frenchfield is the Cross Keys Inn (which was for a short time in the early 21st century known as the Carleton Inn and was closed between 2004 and 2008).

  4. List of motels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_motels

    This is a list of motels.A motel is lodging designed for motorists, and usually has a parking area for motor vehicles. Entering dictionaries after World War II, the word motel, coined in 1925 as a portmanteau of motor and hotel or motorists' hotel, referred initially to a type of hotel consisting of a single building of connected rooms whose doors faced a parking lot and, in some circumstances ...

  5. Penrith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrith

    Penrith and Cockermouth (UK Parliament constituency), from 1918 to 1950; Penrith (UK Parliament constituency), from 1885 to 1918; Penrith railway station; Penrith Building Society, a financial institution in Cumbria, England; Penrith A.F.C., a football club in Penrith, Cumbria; Penrydd, a former parish in Wales, also spelled Penrith

  6. Listed buildings in Penrith, Cumbria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listed_buildings_in...

    Penrith is a town and civil parish in Westmorland and Furness, Cumbria, England. It contains 191 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, five are listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, 23 are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade.

  7. Penrith, Cumbria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrith,_Cumbria

    The origins of Penrith go far back in time. There is archaeological evidence of "early, concentrated and continuous settlement" in the area. [M 1] The Neolithic (c. 4500–2350 BCE) or early-Bronze Age (c. 2500–1000 BCE) sites at nearby Mayburgh Henge, King Arthur's Round Table, Little Round Table, Long Meg and Her Daughters, and Little Meg, and the stone circles at Leacet Hill and Oddendale ...

  8. Yanwath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanwath

    Yanwath is a village in the Westmorland and Furness district of Cumbria, England, 1 mile south of Penrith. There is a primary school at Yanwath, with 192 pupils. [1] Yanwath Gate Inn, in the centre of the village, dates from the 17th century. It is a Grade II listed building. [2] Half a mile north-west of the village, Yanwath Hall is a ...

  9. City of Penrith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Penrith

    Penrith was declared a City on 21 October 1959, and expanded westwards to include Emu Plains and Emu Heights, formerly part of the City of Blue Mountains, on 25 October 1963. As of the 2021 census the City of Penrith had an estimated population of 217,664. [1] It is a member council of the Hawkesbury River County Council.