Hotels in Kushinagar - Hotel Lotus Nikko
Lotus Nikko hotel redefines the standard of comfort and hospitality. It is located at 5 minutes walk from "Mahaparinirvana temple"& "Japanese temple".
Hearty hospitality has always been one of the finest traditions of India culture. In ancient and medieval India, a person's hospitality defined high nobility and character. Fortunately, these traditions are still alive, and a very few very special places epitomize them like no other place can.
Hotel Specifications
Accommodation
The hotel has 52 spacious deluxe rooms and 2 luxurious suites are spread across a two-storey building. Among the notable features of the hotel is a Japanese bathhouse called as Ofuro.
Dining
Enjoy at the most elegantly furnished, multi-cuisine specialty restaurant that has an aesthetical ambience featuring Indian, Chinese, Continental, Japanese, Thai, and Korean cuisines. The hotel chef guarantees to take you on an exotic gourmet trip.
Recreation
The Hotel offers services like Money Changer, and Travel Desk Service.
Basic Data
|
Country |
India |
State |
Uttar Pradesh |
City |
Kushinagar |
Location |
4 Kms From Airport,
32 Km From Gorakhpur Railway Station and 3 Km From Bus Stand |
Rooms |
54 Rooms |
City Information
Kushinagar is a small town located in the eastern part of Uttar Pradesh. It is world famous because of its association with Lord Gautama Buddha (563 BC-483 BC), the founder of Buddhism. The religious significance of Kushinagar is immense among followers of Buddhism all over the world because it is here that Lord Gautama Buddha breathed his last.
Kushinagar is one of the four holiest pilgrim centres of Buddhist faith after Lumbini, Bodhgaya and Sarnath. The most important landmark of Kushinagar is the Ramabhar Stupa. It is said that this massive brick stupa had been built on the very spot where Lord Buddha was cremated in 483 BC.
Another attraction of Kushinagar is the Mahaparinirvana temple, which has a huge reclining statue of Lord Buddha. The town also has a number of modern stupas and shrines, which have been built by various Buddhist countries, apart from the remains of ancient shrines and Buddhist settlements.
Thousands of Buddhist pilgrims and tourists visit this small town throughout the year to the see the place where Lord Buddha preached his last sermon, "All things must pass. Decay is inherent in all things" before renouncing the world forever. The annual Buddha Poornima festival is held on a large scale in Kushinagar to celebrate the birthday of Lord Buddha.
|