The manor house was originally two-storey with a rectangular floor plan. The building has a block character and is situated on the edge of a large park. The front facade is the edge of a rectangular square, where it has an undeniably dominant position from an architectural point of view. Due to the use of space, the entrance parts of the ground floor are designed in a relatively grand style. Other areas such as the hotel café and restaurant are connected to the entrance hall, where the hotel reception is located. The building is partly basement. In the cellars there is a beautiful wine bar with a 9 meter deep well, which is the pride of Mošov Castle. A wide wooden staircase provides access to two floors, where there are hotel rooms with a possible capacity of 48 beds. The hotel offers 4 De luxe rooms, 15 double rooms and 10 single rooms.
The rooms on the ground floor have simple vaults without significant ornaments. An exception is the room in the current restaurant, the so-called "Office", where there is a plastic motif on the ceiling corresponding to the purpose of the space: a sealed envelope and four hearts. According to legend, it was here that the countess' love letters were created… The Mošovce manor offers conference rooms, which are an ideal place to meet the most demanding requirements. The majesty and discretion of the walls of the manor house ideally meet the requirements of business meetings, weddings or other private events. After 1945, the manor house was used for school purposes: First there was the State Children's Home for War Orphans, in the economic part a kindergarten, later a special boarding school, after which the Agricultural Vocational School began to operate here. In the first half of the 1990s, the building was bought from the village by Slovenská filmová tvorba Bratislava. The last time a saga about Turčian peasants, Alžbetin dvor, was filmed here.
On the night of February 14, 1963, a shingled roof of a manor made of red spruce caught fire from burning soot in one of the chimneys. Despite the deployment of 14 fire brigades, the flames reached a height of 20 meters and in the whole village it was possible to read the newspaper in their light. The whole roof burned down in the fire; fortunately, it was later restored.
On the night of February 14, 1963, a shingled roof of a manor made of red spruce caught fire from burning soot in one of the chimneys. Despite the deployment of 14 fire brigades, the flames reached a height of 20 meters and in the whole village it was possible to read the newspaper in their light. The whole roof burned down in the fire; fortunately, it was later restored.
Kollárovo námestie 36, 038 21
Mošovce
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