I stayed here for a few days in August 2006. I chose this hotel because the three central Ibis hotels (Ibii?) were all full and to be honest the Mercure wasn't much more expensive anyway.
Two months later I can't remember much about the hotel, which shows you have special it wasn't! It's just a standard Mercure offering, perfectly acceptable for the price.
One slightly unusual thing I do remember is that this hotel still has keys which you're expected to hand in each time you leave the building, rather than the more usual keycards seen in most chain hotels nowadays.
I can't comment on the breakfasts as I rarely eat breakfast, and even if I do I won't pay hotel prices for it! There's no restaurant in the hotel itself but there's an "associated" hotel in the building; again, as I didn't try it, I can't comment on it.
Getting there: The hotel is easy to get to from the city centre, with tram stop Rosa-Luxembrg-Platz (line 6) just around the corner. Note that to go into the city centre you have to get the tram which seems to be going *away* from the city centre; it turns back towards the centre at Albertplatz and crosses the Carolabrücke before taking you to the Hauptbahnhof (main station).
The Albertplatz tram stop (served by 4 routes) and the Carolaplatz stop are each about 5 minutes walk away from the hotel.
Information about public transport is at [--].
The nearest rail (train) station is Dresden-Neustadt, but the tramline between there and Albertplatz is closed for work, so the most convenient station is actually Hauptbahnhof. Neustadt station is only about 15 minutes walk, though.
If you prefer to walk into the city, the Zwinger Palace, Theater and the Frauenkirche are all about 15 minutes walk from the hotel, with fine views along the Elbe as you cross the Carolabrücke.
My suggestion: If you intend using public transport *and* visiting the area around Dresden, buy the 72-hour Dresden Regio Card from the tourist information office, which covers travel on local trains and buses to places like Meissen and Bad Schandau. Note that the 48-hour Dresden City Card (whilst 10 Euro cheaper) doesn't cover anything like such a wide area, so it might actually be worthwhile buying the 72-hour pass even if you're not staying in Dresden for three days.
- Golden Tulip Dresden
