Lobby
Frescoes and antiques personalize this lovely Hotel in the mountain. The contemporary design is made by the architect Roberto Bongiovanni, it offer a decent heat in the halls and rooms and apartments in the huts.
Exterior
A prestigious residence that is built on a rocky outcrop of the 800 century. It is exposed to the midday sun, Set among chalets, a seventeenth-century village overlooking the valley. The Hotel has been restored, with its old world charm, in a comfortable four stars.
Rooms
Our 24 rooms differ from each other in terms of color, furnishings and structurally. The suites, the apartments in the baitas and double rooms, all of which have LCD TV, a mini-bar and safe, have splendid views over the valley, up to the mountains or over the village.
Restaurant
CASA ALLA PIANA Restaurant: Also open to non-residents and guests reported by several gastronomic guides, offers traditional recipes Walser, dishes of Valsesian, and Ossola Vercelli and the best interpretation of crops, pasture and fishing of the season to give tables of our valley.The frescoed rooms, the ballroom of Gianoli and the old kitchen of the house offer intimate and beautiful to enjoy a refined cuisine linked to the land and tradition.The restaurant can accommodate up to 100 people in the inner rooms and up to 180 seats with the help of marquees set up in the garden of the Hotel, offering highly flexible and customized solutions, from private to business lunches, the gala dinner.
Location
This elegant 19th-century residence surrounded by baitas (chalets) in an 18th-century village has been restored to its former splendor and is now a very comfortable 4-star hotel. Frescoes and antique furniture provide an intriguing contrast to contemporary styling and design, lending a personal atmosphere to the interior of this lovely mountain residence. Come and enjoy the secluded charm of our receptions rooms, bedrooms and our baitas, tastefully converted into apartments.. The Alpine scenery of the upper Valsesia is still unspoiled. It also has a rich historic and artistic heritage. In the 13th century, the Walser people crossed the Alps into this valley, bringing their culture with them. Because of its lush vegetation, the Valsesia is known as the “greenest valley in Italy”. Deciduous and coniferous forests, magnificent Alpine pastures and tarns, dominated by the jagged peaks and the glaciers and rock walls of the Monte Rosa massif form the scenery of the upper Valsesia, which has been designated a “Parco Naturale”, offering plenty of scope to hikers, climbers and naturalists alike.