Abba Reino de Navarra, Acella, 1, Pamplona 31008, Navarra, Spain
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Abba Reino de Navarra 
Acella, 1, Pamplona 31008, Navarra, Spain
+34 948 177575, +34 948 177778
http://www.abbareinodenavarrahotel.com
General and in-room facilities and services available at Abba Reino de Navarra
lobby bar
restaurant
fully equipped common kitchen
summer garden
summer terrace/patio
conference room
fax services
fitness center
sauna
pets are admitted
rooms for non-smokers
playground for children
elevator on site
suitable for disabled guests
dry cleaning
laundry/washing services
24-hour room service
rent-a-car
souvenir shop
currency exchange
phone at the reception
garage places on site
credit/debit cards accepted
common TV room
television set in room
telephone in room
internet connection in room
heating in room
air conditioner in room
ironing facilities in room
mini bar in room
safety deposit box in room
en-suite/private bathroom
hairdryer in room
Some excerpts from the website of Abba Reino de Navarra that might be useful
Legal notice / Data protection. By this notice, we, Abba Hoteles S.A., whose registered office is at Calle BerlA­n, 51-53, Barcelona, 080014 Spain, telephone +34 93 363 23 30, fax +34 93 363 23 33 and Corporate Tax I/D number A-31667637, being the owners of web portal. now inform our customers and users of our website and our reservations system of our Personal Data Protection Policy in accordance with the provisions of Constitutional Law no. 15 of 13th December 1999. By completing one of our forms and accepting our personal data policy, you agree to and authorise Abba to make use of and process the data supplied for the purpose set out in the form; this may be either: To provide the service necessary to ensure that your reservation at the establishment chosen by you is handled effectively, and for which we will be supplied with the data needed to guarantee the said reservation. To send you an e-mail containing a questionnaire enabling you to provide an assessment of your stay at the establishment you chose. To allow us to send you our newsletter and to use your e-mail address to do so. To make it possible for us to reply to any of your enquiries through the a€ścontact usa€ť link and to send you information about Abba Hoteles and its various establishments. Some of your personal data details processed during your reservation will be on file in our system in order to make easier your future reservations in this site. We, Abba Hoteles, hereby guarantee that we take full responsibility for the said files and that these are properly declared to and registered with the General Registry of the Data Protection Agency. We, Abba Hoteles, hereby inform our customers that they may exercise their rights of access, rectification, cancellation and objection. For this purpose, please write to our registered office mentioned above, marking your envelope or letter with the reference a€śProtecciAłn de Datos (data protection)a€ť or send an e-mail to. We, Abba, hereby guarantee that we will treat your personal data in confidence and that the server in which they are stored possesses the means of security laid down in Spanish data protection legislation. Use of cookies A cookie is a very small text file which a server can leave in the usera€™s hard disk with the aim of identifying users when they connect again. Any website can only read those cookies sent by it, never anyone elsea€™s. Cookies are only associated with an anonymous user and do not allow access to personal data or to financial or health information. A cookie is not an executable file, nor is it capable of containing or spreading a virus; it may also not be larger in size than 4 Kb.We at Abba use cookies for the sole purpose of facilitating navigation around our reservations system and for obtaining statistics concerning the use of same. This will enable us to recognise you on any of your subsequent visits to our website.You can configure your web navigator either to accept or reject the cookies you receive or to advise you when the web server wishes to store any in your computer. If you use Microsoft Internet Explorer, go to the Tools - Internet Options - Privacy menu. If you use Netscape/Mozilla, go to the Tools - Cookies Manager menu. If you use Opera, go to Favorites - Privacy - Cookies filter. We at Abba are grateful to you for agreeing to accept cookies. This will help us to obtain more precise data, which, in turn, will allow us to improve the working and design of our reservations system. a€śWork with usa€ť clause We would inform you that your personal data, as well as all the information you supply us with during the selection process will become part of a file for which we, Abba Hoteles S.A., have responsibility, with a view to managing your employment application and to assessing your suitability for a job in any of the establishments in our chain. For this purpose you agree to your data being forwarded to any of our establishments, including those situated outside Spain, an updated list of which can be found on this website. You may access, rectify, cancel or object to the way in which these have been processed by writing to or by letter to our registered office at C/ Berlin nAş 51-53 Barcelona 08014, quoting reference ProtecciAłn de Datos. Newsletter mailings data protection clause Your data form part of a file for which Abba Hoteles, S.A., have responsibility and which is used to make it possible to send the present Newsletter. You may access, cancel, rectify or object to the way in which these have been processed by writing to or by letter to our registered office at C/ Berlin nAş 51-53 Barcelona 08014, quoting reference ProtecciAłn de Datos. If you do not wish to receive any more communications by e-mail, please return the present e-mail, indicating a€śBaja (Unsubscribe)a€ť in the space marked a€śAsunto (Subject matter)a€ť.

Welcome to Pamplona, a friendly and simple city which harmoniously combines ancient and modern features. With 190,000 inhabitants, it offers a wonderful quality of life, with no traffic jams or pollution, and has wonderful facilities. As you explore its historic centre, you will see a€śthe Three Pamplonasa€ť; the Burgos de San Cernina€ť and a€śSan Saturninoa€ť, a€śSan NicolAˇsa€ť and NavarrerA­aa€ť which dominate old Pamplona. We begin our tour along the Paseo Sarasate, which links the older part with the rest of the city. Here we can see the Monumento a los Fueros de Navarra and the Iglesia de San NicolAˇs, which was designed as a church-fortress for defence purposes. We continue our tour by walking towards the Plaza del Castillo, the hub around which the city sprang up. Here, on one side starts the Avenida Carlos III, the site of the Teatro Gayarre and the Palacio de la DiputaciAłn Foral de Navarra (Navarre Government building). Just across the square, we take Calle Chapitela and, turning right, come to Calle Estafeta (known because this is where the bulls run during the famous San FermA­n festivals, from 6th to 14th July) and Calle Curia. Down this street, we come to the Catedral de Santa MarA­a; now Pamplona's Cathedral, built in a Gothic style on the ruins of an old Romanesque cathedral demolished in 1391. Its construction spanned several centuries; it was begun in 1394, continued right through the 15th century and was completed in 1501. The faA§ade was built in the 18th century: between 1783 and 1803 the Romanesque faA§ade that had been preserved until then was demolished to be rebuilt in a neo-classical style, and the cathedral was extended. Continuing through the Plazuela de San JosA©, we come to El RedA­n, whose walls form a viewpoint to the part of the city standing on the other side of the river. Going back to Calle Chapitela and turning left, we take Calle Mercaderes which leads us to the Ayuntamiento (Government building), from where, every 6th July, the traditional Chupinazo is set off, marking the beginning of the San FermA­n festivals. Going up some steps on our right, we can visit the Museo Sarasate (museum) and Mercado de Santo Domingo (market), and continuing up the hill of the same name, the Museo de Navarra (museum). As we come back down, we find ourselves at another of the area's most typical churches, the Iglesia de San Saturnino or San Cernin, a Gothic church which, like the Iglesia de San NicolAˇs, played a defensive, military role. The third church worth mentioning is the Iglesia de San Lorenzo, which overlooks the Parque de la Taconera and houses San FermA­na€™s relics in one of its chapels. Nowadays, Pamplona is visited by people from all over the region, making it a meeting point combining the surrounding mountains and plains. Pamplona believes it is one of the greenest cities in Europe, with 4 million square metres of parks and gardens. You can visit the Parque de la Taconera, the Parque de la Vuelta del Castillo and the Parque de la Medialuna, in which you can admire genuine works of floral art, especially in the spring, and the Parque Yamaguchi which is wide open, designed in an oriental style, includes a geyser and is home to Pamplona's planetarium. We should not forget that the River Arga flows through Pamplona, giving it leafy riverside walks. Navarre is an area which produces some very good wine. Since time immemorial, thousands of hectares of vines have provided for wonderful wine-making traditions. Under Navarre's DenominaciAłn de Origen (a label identifying wine of quality), you will discover excellent wines and wineries. Festivals of interest. Navarre has a wealth of customs and traditions: carnivals, dances, rural sports, pelota, cows and txaranga (traditional festivities in the streets), jotas (Aragonese dance with typical music) and much more. And, of course, the Running of the Bulls: at San FermA­n sheer madness overcomes the streets, bringing out indescribable emotions. At 12 midday on 6th July, thousands of young people meet in the Plaza del Ayuntamiento. Many other people from around the region come together in the Plaza del Castillo and nearby streets to cheer when the 'Viva San FermA­n, Gora San FermA­n' rings out and the Chupinazo is set off. The Carnivals in Navarre are well worth seeing, original and brightly coloured, with people dressed in regional costumes. The Carnavales de Lanz, Alsasua, Ituren and Zubieta, at the end of January and coming to a climax in February, are most popular. The gatherings include one in which the people of Navarre pay homage to San Francisco de Javier, their patron saint, on the first Sunday in March. A much-loved tradition is the DA­a de las AlmadA­as in Burgui. On the first Saturday in May, former mariners pay tribute to their dangerous profession by going down the river in wooden rafts. Another story worth telling is the Tributo de las Tres Vacas. Close to Isaba, alongside the Piedra de San MartA­n, on 13th July, French mayors hand to RoncalA©s mayors three cows as payment for use of water and borderland pasture. At Christmas, in the centre and to the north, on 24th December, the Olentzero arrives, a much-loved coal-seller, fond of good food and a drink or two, who comes down the mountain to announce Jesus' birth. The rural sports or herri kilorak were born from the bets made on rural tasks between those attending: lifting stones, felling trees, moving weights, etc. It is quite surprising to see what these participants manage.
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