![]() |
The Buckhorn Inn (Photo: Rare Brick)
|
There’s no lodging inside the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, so book in the outlying towns of Gatlinburg and Townsend, on the Tennessee side of the park.
The quiet Talley Ho Inn (from $59) is on the park's still-undeveloped western border and just a few miles from Cades Cove. Ask for a newly renovated "deluxe" suite on the second flooryou get little more than a bed and TV, but a private terrace affords uninterrupted views of the mountains.
Gatlinburg usually teems with tourists, but Park Place Condominiums (from $115) is tucked away on a low-traffic side street. Overhear the Little Pigeon River from the first-floor units, but all come with fully equipped kitchens, laundry rooms, and terraces.
Unwind in secluded luxury at Buckhorn Inn (from $195), a 1938 lodge and cluster of luxury private cottages just outside of Gatlinburg. Book the two-bedroom, full-amenities Bebb House, a private guest house once home to the inn's original owner. The inn’s restaurant will pack you a sack lunch for your hike for $8.


Email
Print

Bill T. Jones Brings Fela Kuti to Off Broadway

Edelstein on Burn After Reading
Sizing Up the Museum of Arts and Design
Review: A Timely Novel About Laura Bush
Back-to-School Clothes for Tweens
Ask a Shop Clerk:
The Look Book: The Set Designer and Bar Owner
Midtown's Answer to Mario Batali
The New Political Realities of the Election

Steinbrenner and the Yankees Are Fading
Judging the Latest Crop of Glass Towers
The Housing Market Will Reverse on June 30, 2009