|
fiogf49gjkf0d It's a good ten-minute walk east from Great Yarmouth's
train station
to the central Market Place - cross the river by the footbridge and you'll find yourself on North Quay, from where The Conge leads straight there.
Buses
terminate one block from the sea on Wellesley Road and about 600 yards to the northeast of Market Place. There are two
tourist offices
: one in the town hall, on South Quay (Mon-Fri 9am-5pm; tel 01493/846345,
), and a seasonal office on Marine Parade (June-Sept Mon-Sat 9.30am-5.30pm, Sun 10am-5pm; April, May & Oct daily 10am-1pm & 2-5pm; tel 01493/842195). There's also a useful
Broads Information Centre
in the North West Tower, at the foot of North Quay (July-Sept daily 10am-3.45pm; tel 01493/332095).
B&Bs
line every street, with price a fair indication of quality, but if you don't have much luck, call in at the tourist office, which operates an accommodation booking service. Among many options, the
Willow Guest House
, 26 Trafalgar Rd (tel 01493/332355; under A?40), offers sea views from some of its nine bedrooms, while
Senglea Lodge
, 7 Euston Rd (tel 01493/859632; under A?40), is a cosy, well-maintained terraced house with seven pleasant bedrooms a short walk from Marine Parade. For a
hotel
, try the
Royal
, 4 Marine Parade (tel 01493/844215; A?50-60), arguably Yarmouth's grandest - and where Dickens stayed. Yarmouth's
youth hostel
, with self-catering facilities but no cafA©, is in a large Victorian house near the bus station at 2 Sandown Rd (tel 01493/843991,
).
Far and away the best
restaurant
in town is the reasonably priced
Seafood Restaurant
, 85 North Quay (tel 01493/856009; closed Sun), which does a superb fish soup and Mediterranean-influenced seafood dishes.
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
|