About hotel

A 4* hotel situated in the Repinsky Resort country complex offers 66 comfortable rooms in various categories, with striking architecture and designer interiors.

Honeymoon luxury suites for newlyweds have the following options: an infrared sauna, a circular bedroom with romantic attic windows over the bed, a circular sitting room, and a bed with a canopy.

At every step, we strive to offer personalized hotel experience to each guest in line with luxury service standards. A stay at our hotel lets you experience a true countryside charm with modern comforts.

You can book rooms or SPA services 24/7, just call us: +7 (812) 561-12-93 or send an e-mail: info@repinospa.ru, with no additional charges.

You can also use the online booking system on our website.

Secure and pay for your booking with cash (RUB) or using Visa, Euro/Mastercard, or Maestro cards. The hotel reserves the right to block an appropriate amount on the guest’s bank card account until arrival.

The hotel may cancel an unsecured booking after 6:00 p.m. on the arrival day without prior notice. A secured booking is kept reserved until noon on the day following the arrival day. If the guest fails to arrive or cancels the booking less than 24 hours before the arrival time, the price of a 1-night stay is charged.

Our hotel enforces a no smoking policy.

No pets are allowed.

HISTORY

Up until 1948, the name of the Repino settlement had been Kuokkala. A popular early 20th-century resort for St. Petersburg residents, Kuokkala was located in the Terijoki Region, the Grand Duchy of Finland.

Members of the Russian creative class preferred to spend their summers here. Korney Chukovsky and Vladimir Mayakovsky used to be frequent visitors to Kuokkala; it was the permanent residence of the great Russian painter Ilya Repin, while Academician Dmitry Likhachev spent his childhood here.

The name of Maxim Gorky (Alexei Maximovich Peshkov) is closely linked to the locality. After the Tsarist government had to let the writer out of the Peter and Paul Fortress under pressure from Revolutionary forces, Gorky went to Kuokkala and stayed there, in his Lintula dacha, for a few months, until September 1905.

The dacha itself has not survived; a public resort, financed by trade unions and named after Gorky, was later erected in its place. The complex featured several accommodation facilities, a sports pavilion, and an administration building. A fire damaged some buildings; others were demolished, and the rest grew dilapidated with time.

The former resort’s main building was later restored, refurbished, and included in the Repinsky Resort country complex.