Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sweet Springs Resort and spa was founded in Sweet Springs, West Virginia, United States in 1792. Once known as Old Sweet Springs, [3] this historic resort hotel is currently undergoing renovation by the nonprofit Sweet Springs Resort Park Foundation. The property enjoys notoriety for its natural hot spring.
Murrieta Hot Springs Resort is a geothermal spa that goes back more than a century. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times) Whatever promotions the new management pursues, it will be tough to match ...
The Latin phrase sanitas per aquam means "health through water", involving the treatment of disease and various ailments by balneotherapy in natural hot springs. [2] Many hot springs are natural rock soaking pools that are only accessible on foot or horseback, while others are developed into resort spas.
The Hot Springs Resort and Spa is one of the region's biggest tourism draws. General manager Heather West said the facility will enter "version 6.0."
Fairview Hot Springs was a resort hotel in Fairview, California, United States (present-day Costa Mesa, Orange County, California) from about 1887 to about 1918. The source of the water that constituted the "hot springs" was actually a well that yielded a combination of heated artesian water and natural gas .
In addition to wildcrafted facials and bodywork, the intimate 9,000-square-foot spa offers a serene indoor saltwater pool, two outdoor meadow hot tubs, a dry sauna and a fitness and movement ...
Calistoga Sulphur Hot Springs around 1890 Calistoga Spa Hot Springs Pool in 2013. Calistoga Spa Hot Springs, formerly known as Calistoga Hot Sulfur Springs, is a geothermal spring system and resort located in the upper Napa Valley town of Calistoga, California. The resort has been continuously operated as a hot spring resort since the early 1900s.
The Omni Bedford Springs Resort & Spa is a resort hotel which is located outside of Bedford, Pennsylvania. Established in 1806, it is one of the last and best-preserved of 19th-century resort hotels based around mineral springs. The hotel was documented in 2005 by the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS).