Dein Aufenthalt — Wine & Books
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Das Eigentum — Wine & Books
Wine & Books feels like a wood-panelled private library that happens to pour exceptional Portuguese reds. The lobby is all dark walnut, floor-to-ceiling bookcases and low lighting, with a decanter of port on the sideboard. It suits a quiet reader or a wine obsessive who wants to taste through the Douro without leaving the sofa. The USP is the pairing library: each book has a suggested wine flight, and the staff actually know the difference between a Bairrada and a Dão.
Chroniken von Lisbon
Lisbon's story starts with the Phoenicians, but the Romans built Olisipo into a major port. The 1755 earthquake levelled the Baixa district, which the Marquis of Pombal rebuilt as Europe's first earthquake-proof grid of wide boulevards. The 19th century brought grand domes and lifts, like the Elevador de Santa Justa, and the city's tiled facades became its signature. Today, Lisbon balances a tech-startup buzz with deep fado melancholy; it's European but distinctly Atlantic, facing the river, not the continent.
Beste Zeit zu besuchen
Vollständiger Lisbon-Guide →Die besten Monate
May and September: warm enough for outdoor terraces (22-26°C), but crowds haven't peaked. June also works, though it gets busy from the 12th for the Santos Populares festivals.
Peak / Festival Surge
July and August. The city is full of cruise-ship day-trippers and heat (30°C+). Hotel prices double. Events: NOS Alive music festival (early July) and Festas de Lisboa (June) push demand further.
Budget Schulter Saison
October and November: mild (15-20°C), cheaper rooms, fewer queues at Belém Tower. You lose the rooftop party scene but gain quieter trams and better wine-bar seats.
Wetter & Verpackung
Lisbon has a microclimate quirk: the river breeze keeps it cooler than inland, but July sun is relentless. Pack a medium-weight linen jacket for evenings, and always carry a reusable water bottle — public fountains are everywhere and the water is safe.
Live City Briefing veröffentlicht — Lisbon
- A greve dos motoristas (bus/driver strike) is scheduled for 1-3 July 2026; check Carris warnings before relying on buses. Metro runs normally.
- Time Out Market has opened a new expanded wing with a dedicated natural wine bar and a rooftop terrace — quieter for dinner than the main hall.
- Lisbon's new low-emission zone (ZER) for the Baixa and Bairro Alto now fines non-Portuguese vehicles without prior registration; stick to public transport or walking.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Wine & Books, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors three to five facing the interior courtyard. These are high enough to avoid street-level bustle but low enough for quick lift access during breakfast hours.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the first or second floor facing the street – Rua do Alecrim carries steady foot traffic and tram noise from early morning until late evening. Also avoid rooms directly above the bar on the ground floor, as the lounge can be audible until midnight.
Best views
Corner rooms on floor five offer a side glimpse of the Tagus River and the domed Estrela Basilica – worth the upgrade premium if available.
Quietest floors
Floors three through five are the quietest, set back from street noise and away from the lift’s motor casing.
🔊 Noise notes
Cobblestone streets amplify tram rumble on the frontage; early-morning deliveries to the adjacent pastelaria start at 6am. Request a courtyard-facing room to avoid both.
Insider tips
1) The hotel’s library lounge (open to all guests) serves complimentary Port from 5-7pm – skip the overpriced bar and read by the fire instead. 2) If you’re driving, book a spot at the nearby “Parque das Nações” garage three days ahead; the hotel has only seven spaces and they fill by noon.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Einrichtungen — Wine & Books
Free unlimited Wi-Fi throughout; no login required—open network; speed ~50 Mbps down (tested last month)
One lift serves all 6 floors; no stairs-only sections—property is fully accessible via lift
Complimentary digital newspaper access via PressReader; no physical papers delivered. The building is a converted 18th-century wine lodge with original stone archways exposed in the lobby
Check-in from 15:00; early bag drop available from 10:00; late check-out until 14:00 costs €50 (weekend), €40 (weekday)—subject to availability
Complimentary luggage storage for same-day arrivals and departures; no on-site storage for longer than 12 hours
Step-free entrance via ramp; lift to all floors; wheelchair-friendly public areas; guest rooms have wide doors but no roll-in showers in standard rooms—contact hotel for accessible suite
No on-site parking; valet parking at nearby garage (€25 per night); closest public car park at Praça Luís de Camões (€20 per night); no EV charging
Gebühren, Steuern & Einlagen
City / tourist tax: Mandatory tourist tax: €2.00 per person per night
Deposit & card hold: Full prepayment required at booking; incidental hold of €50 per night on credit card at check-in
Faith & Diät in der Nähe
- Church: Igreja da Memória (97 m · ~1 min walk)
- Church: Igreja Evangélica (517 m · ~6 min walk)
- Church: Ermida de Nossa Senhora da Conceição (654 m · ~8 min walk)
- Church: Ermida de Nossa Senhora das Dores (725 m · ~9 min walk)
Lokaler Lebensstil & Erholung
Vela Latina — 1.9 km · ~23 min walk
Jardim Botânico Tropical — 369 m · ~5 min walk
Museu do Centro Cultural Casapiano — 598 m · ~7 min walk
LU.CA - Teatro Luís de Camões — 566 m · ~7 min walk
Parque Infantil Lisboa Ocidental — 606 m · ~8 min walk
5 Minuten Radius Essentials
Nearest — 713 m · ~9 min walk
Farmácia Moura — 50 m · ~1 min walk
A sua horta na Ajuda! — 229 m · ~3 min walk
Belém — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
Geld & Währung
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATM withdrawals with a debit card that refunds fees, or exchange at a bank or reputable exchange house in the city centre – airport and tourist bureaux give poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard widely accepted; contactless and Apple Pay/Google Pay common. Carry some cash for small purchases in markets or old-school tascas.
Not expected but appreciated: round up the bill or leave 5-10% for good service in restaurants; a euro or two for hotel porters and cleaners; taxi drivers round up to nearest euro.
Essen, Einkaufen und Reisen auf einem Budget
Cheap car hire →A bica (espresso) at a pastelaria or cafe costs around €0.70-€1.00; a galão (milky coffee) is about €1.20.
A prato do dia (daily special) at a local tasca – includes soup, main, drink, coffee – costs about €8-€12.
A main course of grilled fish or a bifana at a casual restaurant runs €10-€15.
Cais do Sodré and Time Out Market are lively for quick eats, but for cheaper street food head to the food trucks at Mercado de Campo de Ourique or the pastéis de nata bakeries everywhere.
Supermarkets include Pingo Doce, Continente, and Lidl – all have branches in central Lisbon.
Rua Augusta and the Baixa area have international high-street chains (Zara, H&M). For cheaper finds, try the Feira da Ladra flea market on Tuesdays and Saturdays.
A Viva Viagem card (€0.50) plus a one-way fare is €1.50; a daily 24-hour pass costs €6.60 for all metros, buses, trams, and elevators. From the airport, the metro (red line) costs €1.50 and takes 20 mins to the centre.
Eat lunch out, not dinner – same quality for half the price. Buy a 24-hour public transport pass if you’ll use trams or the metro more than twice. Skip the 28 tram for sightseeing – take the 12 or just walk to avoid costly tourist traps.
Gut zu wissen — Lisbon
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.87 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
Lisbon112 or 808 24 24
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Lisbon, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Wine & Books
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 713 m · ~9 min walk — pharmacy · Farmácia Moura — 50 m · ~1 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Umher zu kommen
Find train tickets →Oriente Station (via ANAM shuttle) to Pestana Palace → São Bento / Local neighborhoods
💡 Most economical daily transit; buy a Viva Viagem card for unlimited travel. Tram 28 is iconic and passes near the hotel area.
Humberto Delgado Lisbon Airport (LIS) → Pestana Palace Hotel, São Bento
💡 Use official taxi ranks at airport or pre-book through hotel to avoid unmarked taxis. Fixed rates available.
Humberto Delgado Lisbon Airport (LIS) → Marquês de Pombal / City Center
💡 Budget-friendly option; get a 7-Colinas card at the airport for discounted local transit within Lisbon.
Humberto Delgado Lisbon Airport (LIS) → Oriente Station, then taxi/metro to Pestana Palace
💡 Reliable and direct airport connection; combine with metro for seamless journey to São Bento neighborhood.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What are the best rooms at Wine & Books?
Request a room on floors three to five facing the interior courtyard. These are high enough to avoid street-level bustle but low enough for quick lift access during breakfast hours.
Which rooms should I avoid at Wine & Books?
Avoid rooms on the first or second floor facing the street – Rua do Alecrim carries steady foot traffic and tram noise from early morning until late evening. Also avoid rooms directly above the bar on the ground floor, as the lounge can be audible until midnight.
Is Wine & Books noisy?
Cobblestone streets amplify tram rumble on the frontage; early-morning deliveries to the adjacent pastelaria start at 6am. Request a courtyard-facing room to avoid both.
Which rooms have the best views at Wine & Books?
Corner rooms on floor five offer a side glimpse of the Tagus River and the domed Estrela Basilica – worth the upgrade premium if available.
What are insider tips for staying at Wine & Books?
1) The hotel’s library lounge (open to all guests) serves complimentary Port from 5-7pm – skip the overpriced bar and read by the fire instead. 2) If you’re driving, book a spot at the nearby “Parque das Nações” garage three days ahead; the hotel has only seven spaces and they fill by noon.
What time is check-in at Wine & Books?
Check-in at Wine & Books is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Wine & Books have Wi-Fi?
Free unlimited Wi-Fi throughout; no login required—open network; speed ~50 Mbps down (tested last month)
Is there a city or tourist tax at Wine & Books?
Mandatory tourist tax: €2.00 per person per night
Where can I eat cheaply near Wine & Books?
A prato do dia (daily special) at a local tasca – includes soup, main, drink, coffee – costs about €8-€12.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Wine & Books?
A Viva Viagem card (€0.50) plus a one-way fare is €1.50; a daily 24-hour pass costs €6.60 for all metros, buses, trams, and elevators. From the airport, the metro (red line) costs €1.50 and takes 20 mins to the centre.
When is the best time to visit Lisbon?
May and September: warm enough for outdoor terraces (22-26°C), but crowds haven't peaked. June also works, though it gets busy from the 12th for the Santos Populares festivals.
Top-Attraktionen in Lisbon
💡 Start at Miradouro das Portas do Sol for morning light, then walk up to Miradouro da Graça for sunset. Avoid the packed tram 28—walking is faster and free.
💡 Start at Miradouro das Portas do Sol just before sunset for golden light on the rooftops. Avoid the tram 28 route for quieter streets.
💡 Start at the top (Graça) and walk downhill to avoid steep climbs. Best in early morning for fewer crowds.
💡 Skip the paid museum upstairs unless you're keen on religious art. The church itself is free and the main attraction.
💡 Start at the cathedral and walk uphill towards the castle. The best views are free. Avoid trams 12 and 28 at peak times; locals hate the crowds.
💡 Get a super bock from the bar across the street—it's half the price of the kiosk. Bring a blanket as the pavement gets cold by night.
💡 The greenhouse has a small tropical garden and café — cheap coffee and a quiet spot. The park is breezy, so bring a jacket even in summer.
💡 Free entry weekends. Bring a book for the bench under the giant rubber tree at the far end. Closed for lunch (1pm-2pm).