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80m²  living area
3 bedrooms
2  bathrooms
max. 6  Guests
80m²
3 bedrooms
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Great location

Spotlessly clean accommodation

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Great location

Spotlessly clean accommodation

100% Recommendation

Added 105 times to wish list

Online for over 13 years



Description

1FeHa usable all year, 6 pers.
Location: Directly on Lake Ruppin
Near the forest, quiet

Wonderful fishing spot, very rich mushroom area

Description: 80m² 1 living room/ 2 bedrooms sep. kitchen 2 bathrooms
Equipment: bed linen/towels available, microwave, dishwasher, kettle, egg boiler, underfloor heating, new building June 2010, jetty, rowing boat, barbecue, fireplace, use of garden directly on the water (1200m²), large meadow, terrace, badminton court,
Discounts on request
From 48€
Sailing boat/ motor boat optional charterable

Non-smoking
Handicapped accessible
2*shower/WC



House by the lake
Holiday home
Ralf Günther
Lindenallee 80a
16816 Neuruppin
Tel.: 01772887496
r.

Sleeping facilities

Bedroom 1
double bed
Bedroom 2
double bed

Rooms and Facilities

pets are not allowed pets are not allowed
swimming pool swimming pool
non-smokers only non-smokers only
Wifi Wifi
garden garden
TV TV
terrace terrace
dishwasher dishwasher
washing machine washing machine
Show all facilities

Arrival/Location

show on map

Arrival and distances

distance to next shop 0.2 km

0.2 km

distance to next airport 5 km Sportflughafen Neuruppin

5 km

distance to next railway station 2 km Rheinsberger Tor

2 km

distance to next motorway 7 km Neuruppin oder Neuruppin Süd

7 km


Location and surroundings of object

Isolated location, Outskirts, Bicycle path distance < 100 m, Quiet location, Suburban/regional railway connection, Lake location, Forest distance < 500 m, Hiking trails distance < 250 m, Public transport.
Large protected areas:

Stechlin-Ruppiner Land nature park.
Cycle paths:

N1 - Neuruppiner Radweg 1, N2 - Neuruppiner Radweg 2.
Directions:

coming from the motorway A24 - exit Neuruppin - follow the B167 towards Neuruppin - go through the roundabout and stay on the B167 (towards the city centre) - follow this road until the 3rd traffic lights - there turn right into Schinkelstr. - follow this road until the end - then turn left into Friedrich-Engels-Str. - follow this street to the end - then turn right into Steinstr. - you will cross the Seedammbrücke - then turn right at the 1st set of traffic lights into Lindenalle - the property is on the right hand side (Lindenallee) Neuruppin is one of the largest cities in Germany. The city of Neuruppin, 60 km northwest of Berlin in the district of Ostprignitz-Ruppin, consists in the south of the districts located on the banks of the Ruppiner or Rhinsee, including the actual core city of Neuruppin and Alt Ruppin. In the north, it extends across Ruppiner Schweiz to Kyritz-Ruppiner Heide.
The town lies in the Ruppiner Land.

Before the town fire (until 1787)
Neuruppin around 1694

The prehistoric settlement of the region extends from the Middle Stone Age through the later Bronze Age with first Germanic, then Slavic settlements (in the old town area - including "Neuer Markt" - and in the surrounding countryside) on the shores of Lake Ruppin. In late Slavic times, this area was settled by the Zamcici tribe, whose centre of power was a castle on the island of Poggenwerder, which lies to the south of Alt Ruppin. After the Wenden Crusade in 1147 and the conquest of the land by German sovereigns, including Albrecht the Bear, a large lowland castle ("Planenburg") was built next to the older Slavic castle complex on the Alt-Ruppin Amtswerder from 1214. In the northern foreland, a market settlement with St. Nicholas' Church was built, to the east of it and on the other side of the Rhin River, the "Kiez": the town (Olden Ruppyn) of Alt Ruppin had come into being.

Southwest of the castle town, the settlement of today's Neuruppin with St. Nicholas' Church and a street market like the one at the beginning of the 13th century developed while retaining the name Ruppin.

The then (Neu-) Ruppin was a planned town foundation of the Counts of Lindow-Ruppin, a collateral line of the Arnstein family, who resided in Alt Ruppin. The first documented mention dates back to 1238. An expansion of the original market settlement of Alt Ruppin into the present-day town of Neuruppin probably took place before the Dominican monastery was founded in 1246 as the first settlement of the order between the Elbe and Oder rivers by the first prior, Wichmann von Arnstein. Günther of Arnstein granted the town charter of Stendal on 9 March 1256. The town was fortified in the 13th century by palisades and a rampart ditch system, later it was fortified by walls and rampart ditches; 24 weigh houses and two high towers reinforced the town walls. In addition, there were three gates, the Altruppiner/ Rheinsberger Tor in the north, the Berliner/ Bechliner Tor in the south and the Seetor in the east. the complete walled enclosure took place at the latest towards the end of the 15th century.

Neuruppin's oldest part was an elongated Anger, accompanied by two parallel streets between the southern and northern city gates, with Neuruppin's oldest church (St. Nikolai) to the south of it. Neuruppin's main street had been paved since the middle of the 16th century. Across Neuruppin, from the northwest towards the lake, ran the Klappgraben, coming from the Ruppiner Mesche, to supply the town with service water and for drainage, which was partly filled in in 1537 and renewed as an open canal in Schinkelstraße after the town fire in 1787.

Neuruppin was already one of the larger north-eastern German towns in the Middle Ages. Preserved remains from this period include parts of the city wall, parts of the monastery church of St. Trinitatis (1246), St. George's Chapel (1362), the infirmary hospital (1490), and remains of the lakeside quarter. The medieval town had an almost square ground plan of about 700 m × 700 m, which is conspicuously truncated at the eastern corner. The OSE side borders on Lake Ruppin.

After the extinction of the Counts of Lindow-Ruppin in 1524, Neuruppin came as a settled fief to the Elector Joachim I. The Thirty Years' War also devastated Neuruppin, and after 1685 French Huguenots settled there. In 1688 Neuruppin became one of the first garrison towns in Brandenburg. Crown Prince Friedrich was commander here from 1732-1740 after his unsuccessful escape attempt and subsequent imprisonment in Küstrin. During this time Bernhard Feldmann became town physicist. His transcripts of historically interesting council records are today considered the most important collection of sources on early town history, as the original records were destroyed in the town fire of 1787.

A school was first mentioned in Neuruppin in 1365. It was a Latin school of temporary supra-regional importance, which Theodor Fontane also attended. Its history is well documented from 1477 onwards.[3]

From 1740, the organ builder Gottlieb Scholtze had his workshop in Neuruppin, who, among other things, built the organ in Rheinsberg.
Monument to Frederick William II

Neuruppin had been a garrison town since around 1688. At times the proportion of soldiers and civilian troop members was 1500 out of 3500 inhabitants.[4] Neuruppin only lost this status with the withdrawal of the group of Soviet forces in Germany.
Town fire and reconstruction (1787-1803)

An important turning point in the development of the town was the wildfire of Sunday, 26 August 1787. The fire broke out in a grain-filled barn at the Berliner Tor in the afternoon and spread rapidly. Only two narrow areas on the eastern and western edges of the city remained. A total of 401 bourgeois houses, 159 outbuildings and outhouses, 228 stables and 38 barns, the parish church of St. Mary, the town hall, the Reformed church and the Prinzliche Palais were destroyed. No human lives were lost. The damage to property was estimated at almost Talers. Approximately thalers were replaced from the fire fund, a special church collection yielded thalers, and the Prussian government provided thalers of retribution money for the reconstruction of the city. In total, the state spent over one million Taler in the following years.
Plan of the city of Neuruppin, 1789, Bernhard Mattias Brasch

Bernhard Mattias Brasch, who had already been working in the city since 1783, was the city's construction director and implemented the specifications of the reestablishment commission and supervised the reconstruction of the city. This took place from 1788 to 1803 and was enforced according to a uniformly planned ground plan. Brasch's plan envisaged the expansion of the city from 46 to almost 61 hectares with the removal of the ramparts between the Temple Garden and the lake. The two north-south streets, which were close together, were united into one axis, today's Karl-Marx-Strasse. A rectangular network of streets with two-storey eaves houses throughout was created. Long wide streets, interrupted by stately squares, and houses in the early classicist style have characterised the cityscape since that time. These urban planning reform principles are still clearly recognisable today. Thus, with the reconstruction, a neo-classical city layout was created that is unique in this originality. Even today, it is still considered a prime example of early classicist town planning. Reconstruction was completed as early as 1803, except for the parish church of St. Mary (built between 1801 and 1806 with the help of Carl Ludwig Engel), which was delayed until 1806 due to structural problems.
Reconstruction until the First World War (1804 to 1914)
Hand-coloured Neuruppin picture sheet, around 1850

Johann Bernhard Kühn began producing picture sheets in Neuruppin in 1750, thematically designed and for a long time hand-coloured broadsides. His son Gustav Kühn (1794-1868) achieved print runs of sometimes over 3 million copies per year (e.g. the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71). The prints became known worldwide with the inscription Neu-Ruppin, zu haben bei Gustav Kühn. Two other companies produced the popular picture sheets: Philipp Oehmigke and Hermann Riemschneider as well as Friedrich Wilhelm Bergemann. All three picture sheet producers managed to hold their own in the German picture sheet manufacturer competition (more than 60 companies throughout Germany) and occupy the leading positions for a long time.

in 1877, the organ builder Albert Hollenbach set up his workshop in Neuruppin. He built organs in the churches in the districts of Bechlin, Buskow, Karwe, Nietwerder and Storbeck, as well as in the Siechenhauskapelle in the old town of Neuruppin.

After 1880, Neuruppin became the centre of a branch line network, which was operated by the Ruppiner Eisenbahn AG until 1945. This radiated to Fehrbellin-Paulinenaue (1880), Kremmen-Berlin and Wittstock-Meyenburg (1899) and Neustadt and Herzberg respectively (1905).

In 1893, the Neuruppin state lunatic asylum was built on the southern edge of the city centre.

Fire extinguishers have been manufactured in Neuruppin since 1905. The Minimax fire extinguishers in particular quickly became widespread due to their ease of use.

During the First World War, a flying squadron was stationed in Neuruppin and an airfield was built.
From the First World War to the end of the Cold War (1914-1989)

in 1921 an open-air settlement was founded in the Gildenhall district by the master builder and settlement engineer Georg Heyer (1880-1944). The aim of the settlement was to bring together artists and artisans to live and work together in order to create and produce everyday products in an artisan form that was affordable for everyone. It brought together renowned artists and artisans and existed until 1929.

in 1926, the road next to the railway embankment across Lake Ruppin was completed. The settlements Gildenhall and Kolonie Wuthenow thus received a direct connection to Neuruppin. in 1929, these settlements were incorporated, after the Treskow estate district had already been incorporated in 1928.

During the so-called euthanasia in the National Socialist era, Aktion T4, the Neuruppin state mental hospital served as an intermediate institution for the killing centres in Brandenburg and Bernburg. Therefore, the number of patients had increased from 1 January 1937 to 1 April 1940. in 1941, only a few of the planned beds were still occupied. in 1943, the greater part of the patients were transferred to other institutions in Aktion Brandt.[6] The hospital was partly used as a reserve hospital. After 1945, parts of the facility served as a district hospital. On 20 September 2004, 6 stumbling stones were laid on the grounds of the Ruppiner Kliniken symbolically for the euthanasia victims of the former state insane asylum.

In June 1933, at the beginning of the National Socialist era, more than 80 political opponents of the Nazis, mainly communists and social democrats, were deported to an SA torture cellar at the brewery on Altruppiner Allee. They are commemorated by a memorial stone created in 1947 and by the memorial on the Schulplatz, which was replaced by an ensemble of figures in 1981.

in 1934, the Neuruppin military airfield was revived as the Neuruppin Flying School.

The city's approximately 90 Jewish citizens were persecuted, deported and murdered during the Nazi dictatorship. Their Old Cemetery, established in 1824, was treated leniently; preserved Jewish gravestones were moved to the New Cemetery (Protestant Cemetery) by order of the then regimental commander of the Wehrmacht, Paul von Hase. Since 17 November 2003, stumbling stones in the core town and in Alt Ruppin have commemorated the murdered Jewish inhabitants.

On 1 May 1945, the Soviet forces reached Neuruppin and began shelling the town from the opposite shore of the lake. However, an unknown person managed to raise a white flag on the tower of the monastery church and thus prevent further destruction.

The Soviet Armed Forces Group in Germany (GSSD) used the military airfield immediately north of the core town, the operation of which caused considerable noise pollution in the town. in 1989, massive demonstrations by the people of Neuruppin in connection with plans to continue using the Wittstock military training and air-ground firing range led to the closure of the airfield.

in 1952 Neuruppin became the district town of the district of the same name in the Potsdam district.

During the GDR era, the large company Elektro-Physikalische Werke Neuruppin (EPW) produced electronic components.
Neuruppin in the Federal Republic of Germany (from 1990)
House I of the Ruppiner Kliniken

After reunification, the district of Neuruppin remained in the state of Brandenburg for the time being. After the district reform, it was absorbed into the district of Ostprignitz-Ruppin. in 1993 Neuruppin was significantly enlarged by the incorporation of the town of Alt Ruppin and surrounding villages.

Until 1991, Neuruppin was still the location of the 12th Soviet armoured division. The barracks were later converted into residential buildings as part of the Expo 2000 outdoor project. Parts of the airfield are now still used for gliding.

in 1996, the former "Landesklinik Neuruppin" and the district hospital became part of the "Ruppiner Kliniken GmbH" and were transferred to the district of Ostprignitz-Ruppin. The Ruppiner Kliniken are thus one of the largest regional employers.

The Protestant church districts of Ruppin and Wittstock/Dosse merged in 1998, and Neuruppin lost the seat of the superintendent to Wittstock.

On 7 September 2002, the 7th Brandenburg Day took place in Neuruppin, with about 1,000 visitors. Under the impression of the flood disaster in Saxony in August 2002, numerous artists such as Udo Lindenberg and Gerhard Schöne donated their fees for the flood victims.

Honouring and commemorating Theodor Fontane

in 1994, on the occasion of the 175th anniversary of Theodor Fontane's birth, the Fontane Prize was endowed by the city of Neuruppin.

in 1998, on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of Theodor Fontane's death, the city of Neuruppin celebrated the state-wide Fontane Year with around 200 events in honour of the poet. The city opened the Fontane Year and was given the name Fontane City.
Since 2010, the city has held its Fontane Festival Neuruppin every two years during Whitsun.

Since 2004, Neuruppin has made headlines for corruption and nepotism. In view of the accumulation of these scandals in local politics, the city was given nicknames such as "Märkisches Palermo" or "Little Palermo" and "Korruppin" in the course of coming to terms with them.

In 2006, the former city councillor Olaf Kamrath (CDU) was sentenced to many years in prison as the "head" of the XY gang for, among other things, gang-related narcotics offences.

in 2007, the former city councillor Reinhard Sommerfeld (Neuruppiner Initiative) was convicted of bribery of members of parliament, the only conviction of this kind in Germany.

Otto Theel (Die Linke), a former member of the state parliament, was sentenced on 15 May 2008 to nine months' imprisonment on probation for taking advantage in office during his term as mayor of Neuruppin. He subsequently resigned his Landtag mandate.

In September 2008, the Sparkasse Ostprignitz-Ruppin parted company with its former chairman of the board Josef Marckhoff, who had his employer throw him a party costing around € 60 on the occasion of his own 60th birthday. The date coincided with the 160th anniversary of the company.

Dietmar Lenz, former managing director of the municipal public utility company in Neuruppin, was sentenced on 19 March 2009 to two years' imprisonment on probation for serious breach of trust and acceptance of benefits on the charge of having spent more than Euros bypassing the supervisory board to support the sports club MSV Neuruppin. He died by suicide at the end of 2009. Following this suicide, which she blamed on Mayor Jens-Peter Golde, a citizens' initiative with the help of Otto Theel and Rheinhard Sommerfeld, both of whom had relevant criminal records, initiated a petition to vote Mayor Jens-Peter Golde out of office. According to its own information, it failed in February 2010 with the required number of signatures. Golde was accused by the citizens' petition "No more like this!" of lacking leadership quality, not fulfilling his election programme and endangering jobs in Neuruppin.

Buildings
Sacred buildings
Campo Santo of the von Quast family, restored (2007)

* St. Trinitatis Monastery Church: from 1246 (landmark of Neuruppin)
* Parish church (today a congress and event centre)
* Schinkel church in Wuthenow (with painting of the oldest view of the town)
* 13th-century village church in Radensleben (including the Campo Santo of the von Quast family, laid out by Ferdinand von Quast in 1854)
* Church in Karwe, with three memorial plaques to the Knesebecks. Karl Friedrich von dem Knesebeck had the churchyard portal built in 1844.
* medieval church in Bechlin
* Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart
* St. Laurentius infirmary chapel with UpHus (1694, oldest half-timbered house in the town)
* St. George Chapel

Secular buildings

* almost completely preserved town wall (partly medieval town fortification, partly aczis wall from later times)
* Fontane birthplace with Löwen pharmacy
* Preacher's widow's house: Karl Friedrich Schinkel lived in this building with his mother from 1787-1794.
* Old grammar school: It was built in 1790. Schinkel, Fontane and Wilhelm Gentz went to school there.
* Manor house in Gentzrode

Villa in the Temple Garden

* Temple Garden with Temple of Apollo: Formerly an orchard and vegetable garden owned by Crown Prince Frederick, the garden was acquired (after several other owners) by the merchant and peat digger Johann Christian Gentz in 1853. Carl von Diebitsch designed the Turkish Villa Gentz, built in the 1850s, the gardener's house (with minaret) and the surrounding wall with gates in an orientalising style. The eclectic garden was designed by Gustav Meyer.

Monuments

* Monument to Friedrich Wilhelm II, erected in 1829 on the initiative of the citizens of Neuruppin.
* Karl Friedrich Schinkel Monument, created by Max Wiese
* Theodor Fontane Monument, created by Max Wiese
* Ferdinand Möhring Monument, created by Max Wiese
* Jahn-Lose-Monument, created by Max Wiese
* Commemorative plaques for the victims of the concentration camp death march of April 1945 on the outskirts of the core city of Neuruppin as well as in Wuthenow and other parts of the town
* Memorial stone or ensemble of figures from 1981 for the victims of fascism
* Commemorative plaque for the communist resistance fighter Franz Maecker, who was murdered in the Berlin-Plötzensee prison in 1943
Stumbling stone for Emilie Drucker
* Stumbling stones for the murdered Jewish citizens of Neuruppin (in the old town of Neuruppin and Alt Ruppin) as well as for the victims of the National Socialist "euthanasia" action T4 from the Neuruppin state insane asylum (on the grounds of the Ruppin clinics)
* Stones, steles and sculptures by the sculptor Wieland Schmiedel at the Protestant cemetery on Wittstocker Allee. Over 100 prisoners of war, forced labourers and crashed Italian airmen are buried there.
* Gustav Kühn Monument "The Lithographer", erected in 2008 to mark the 140th anniversary of his birth.
* Karl Marx Monument, created by Fritz Cremer
* Feldmann stone for the town physicist Bernhard Feldmann, author of the Neuruppin town chronicle "Miscellanea Historica"
* Erich Arendt memorial stele, created in 1968 by Wieland Förster
* Bronze plaque for Eva Strittmatter on the occasion of her 76th birthday

Sculptures in the townscape

* Parzival am See (stainless steel sculpture by Matthias Zágon Hohl-Stein at the Neuruppin bulwark)
* Threat (stainless steel sculpture on the subject of the Bombodrom in front of the parish church)
* Sculpture path
* Sabine Monument in Binenwalde

Museums

* Neuruppin Museum (including Neuruppiner Bilderbogen)
* Handicrafts museum in the museum courtyard (including an exhibition on Minimax fire extinguishers)
* Stendenitz Forest Museum
* Karwe local history museum
* Forestry Museum Alt Ruppin (offers historical insights into the craft of foresters, hunters and forest workers)

Cultural sites

* Heimattierpark Neuruppin in Kunsterspring, including the rarely kept raccoon dogs
* Kulturkirche (supra-regional event centre in the former parish church of St. Marien in Neuruppin with seating for approx. 600)
* Kulturhaus Stadtgarten Neuruppin (supra-regional event centre with approx. 550 seats)
* Galerie am Bollwerk (gallery association for the promotion of contemporary art)
* Theatre shop Neuruppin in the Galerie am Bollwerk
* Neuruppin City Library
* Neuruppin Youth Art School (art and cultural institution for children and young people)
* OPR District Music School
* Jugendfreizeitzentrum JFZ (youth centre for young adults)

Regular events

* Aequinox Music Days (annually in mid-March at the equinox)
* May and Harbour Festival (annually on the first weekend in May, the highlight is the dragon boat race)
* Fontane Festival Neuruppin (every two years)
* Dixie Days (annually in mid-July)
* Korsofahrt (boat parade on the first Saturday in August on the Rhin near Alt Ruppin)
* Wine festival (annually in mid-August)
* St. Martin's market with horse market (annually at the beginning of November around St. Martin's Day)
* Christmas market (annually on the first Advent)

Traffic

Neuruppin can be reached by the RE 6 (Prignitz Express) train every hour from Berlin-Spandau-Hennigsdorf to Wittenberge.

Neuruppin can be reached via the A 24 motorway using the Neuruppin and Neuruppin Süd exits.

There is a network of interesting cycling tours in and around Neuruppin.

Neuruppin is involved in the Fehrbellin airfield (Ruppiner Land airfield).

Public facilities

Neuruppin is the seat of the district administration of the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district. In addition, the Neuruppin District Court, the Neuruppin Local Court, the Neuruppin Social Court and the Neuruppin Labour Court have their seats there.

In addition to the Employment Agency, there is also the Office for the Labour Market for Unemployment Benefit II, as the district is an option municipality. Furthermore, the Regional Division West of the State Office for Occupational Safety and Health has its headquarters here. The former Neuruppin District Military Replacement Office had to make way for the Neuruppin Military Service Advice Centre.

The Neuruppin Centre of State Authorities houses the Neuruppin Special Construction Management, a regional office of the State Office for Consumer Protection, Agriculture and Land Consolidation, the Office for Land Consolidation and Rural Development, the Neuruppin Social Court, the State Office for Occupational Safety, Regional Division West and the Regional Division West TR 2 of the Brandenburg State Environmental Agency. The latter includes the Alt Ruppin Forestry Office with the Kunsterspring Forestry Work School.

The Bundesanstalt für Immobilienaufgaben, Sparte Bundesforst maintains the main office Ruppiner Heide.

Media

The daily newspapers published in Neuruppin are the Ruppiner Anzeiger and a local edition of the Märkische Allgemeine. The local television station ruppin TV provides information about the region via the cable network.

Sport

Due to the large water areas in the town area, there are many water sports opportunities. The MSV Neuruppin football club has become nationally known.


free time activities

fishing
cycling
inline skating
hunting
canoeing
mountain biking
paragliding
horse riding
swimming
gliding
sailing
skiing
surfing
diving
tennis
volleyball
hiking
water ski
Show all activity options Show fewer activity options

Guidelines

Advice by the landlord

additional information about rental price:

Rowing boat incl. electricity consumption with 35Cent / KW after reading

additional information:

Directly at the lake
Very good fishing
Guests caught 24 beautiful zander and 4 eels from the jetty in the week of 18 August 2013
in the following week also more than 20 zander, one with 68 cm and an eel of 84 cm.
Own jetty
from the shore / land the property is not visible, on the water they sit completely undisturbed.


availability

availability calendar not available. Please ask the owner directly for free times.


8 reviews

Overall assessment

5,0 from 5
5.0 amenities/facilites
5.0 value for money
5.0 service
4.9 location
5.0 cleaniless
The ratings are checked for authenticity. Read more about this in our rating guidelines.
The ratings are checked for authenticity. Read more about this in our rating guidelines.

July 2018

Thomas S. from 06493

5,0
5 5 5 5
View German

Holiday directly at the lake

Very nice holiday accommodation on the lake with many excursion possibilities and very nice landlords who are always helpful. Due to the direct location on the lake, it is an ideal property for all those who enjoy swimming. Our family would like to thank the landlord Ralf and his parents for these unforgettable 2 weeks.

recommend for: adventure and experience, holiday with children

January 2014

Fab from Leipzig

5,0
5 5 5 5 5

Vielen Dank für die Schönsten Tage!

Super Haus Schöne Gegend echt netter Vermieter DANKE für Alles!

recommend for: adventure and experience, disabled persons, seniors, holiday with children, holiday without car, cultural and sightseeing holiday, holiday for singles, beach holiday, romantic holiday

Vicinity of the holiday home: Fontane Therme zu der Jahreszeit echt schön und zu Fuß erreichbar

free time activities: Reichhaltig vorhanden auch für kinder!

shopping facilities: alles da Großes Einkaufszentrum in der Stadt

January 2013

charlemagne from Neuruppin/Lindenallee

5,0
5 5 5 5 5

hübsches Ferienhaus

Schönes Ferienhaus am Ruppiner See.

recommend for: adventure and experience

Vicinity of the holiday home: Insgesamte gute, ruhige Lage am Ruppiner See, gepflegte Uferzone mit Steg, zum Glück kein zubetoniertes Urlaubsareal wie andere Uferzonen des Ruppiner Sees.

free time activities: Freizeitangebot: praktisch alles außer Bergsteigen, Mountainbiking und Ski Alpin.

shopping facilities: In der Stadt, am Besten in wenigen Autominuten oder per Rad oder Boot zu erreichen, zu Fuß dauert es. Bäckersladen ist um die Ecke.

December 2012

Martin from Jena

4,8
5 4.8 5 4.5 5

mit gutem Gewissen weiter zu empfehlen !

Vielen Dank, meine Freundin und ich haben uns sehr wohl gefühlt bei euch. Die Leute ware sehr freundlich, und die Unterkunft inkl. Küche waren in einem Top Zustand.
Die Landschaft finden wir zumindest ist sehr schön. Wer also eine schön und gepflegte Unterkunft in dieser Gegend sucht, ist hier genau richtig.
Wir kopmmen nächstes Jahr wieder.

Vielen Dank nochmal.

Lg Martin & Lisa

recommend for: cultural and sightseeing holiday, romantic holiday

Vicinity of the holiday home: Traumhaft

August 2012

Günni from Berlin

4,9
5 5 4.8 5 5

Supper Urlaub Unbedingt zu Empfehlen

der urlaub mit meiner familie hier war wunderschön ich habe hier viel ruhe und frieden gefunden und auch action und spannung ein rundum gelungener urlaub... auch meine familie war sehr glücklich hier

recommend for: adventure and experience, holiday with children, cultural and sightseeing holiday, romantic holiday

Vicinity of the holiday home: die umgebung ist einfach wunderbar idyllische ruhe aber nicht zu weit von der stadt enfernt. dazu liegt das anwesen an der ruhigsten ecke des sees es ist einfach herrlich hier urlaub zu machen und ich werde es immer wieder besuchen

free time activities: die freizeitmöglichkeiten sind vielzeitig... aber besonders haben mir die bootsausflüge gefallen

shopping facilities: typische kleinstadteinkaufmöglichkeiten gibt es im nahe gelgen ort der selbst zu fuß zu erreichen ist

July 2012

Nicky from Wiesbaden

5,0
5 5 5 5 5

Vielen Dank für den SUPER Urlaub! mit Bester Betreuung

Vielen Dank für den Überagenden Urlaub! ein Sehr schön angelegtes Grundstück hier konnten wir mal richtig abschlaten mit lagerfuer direkt auf dem Grudnstück am Sauberen Badesee. mein Mann war gerne angeln und hatte so immer für ein Perfektes Abendessen am Wasser gesorgt. Durch die Kleine Kücke zusätzlich am wasser haben wir jede freie Minute am Wasser verbracht. durch die Herrlichen Alten Bäume hatten wir auch immer ausreichend Schatten bei dem Warmen Juli. Die Sonnenuntergänge vom Steg des Grundstückes aus eind einfach Traumhaft. Dadurch, dass es hier nur ein Ferienhaus gibt, hatten wir echt unsere Ruhe und mußten uns nicht mit anderen Urlaubern ärgern. wer in eingener Gruppe ungestört sein möchte ist hier genau Richtig. und wer trubel haben möchte fährt einfach mit dem Boot in die Stadt, was wir auch oft gemacht haben. Vielen Dank nochmal für den richtig gelungennen URLAUB!
Empfohlen für: Alter 55+, Abenteuer-Suchende, Ausflug mit Freundinnen, Touristen ohne Auto, Besichtigung Sehenswürdigkeiten, Familien mit Teenagern, Familien mit kleinen Kindern, Personen mit körperlichen Einschränkungen, Romantischer Zufluchtsort

recommend for: adventure and experience, disabled persons, seniors, holiday with children, holiday without car, cultural and sightseeing holiday, beach holiday, romantic holiday

Vicinity of the holiday home: Berlin und Rheinsberg nicht weit weg und eine Reise Wert Schönes Spaß bad im Ort und Tierpark gleich in der nähe
Viel Wald und Wasser direkt am Grundstück als Angler und Wassersportler ein Traum!

free time activities: Vielen Dank an den netten Vermieter, der uns mit seiner Privat Yacht die umgebung per Wasser gezeigt hat

shopping facilities: Kaufland Real Einkaufszentren direkt in der Stadt Bäcker ca. 100m Luftlinie

May 2012

HerbertB from Berlin

5,0
5 5 5 5 5

Schöner Urlaub

Sehr schönes Grundstück mit gepflegten Rasen und einem guten Blick über den Neuruppiner See. Desweiteren steht das Haus in einer angenehm ruhigen Gegend. Auch wegen des netten Vermieters kann ich es nur weiterempfehlen.

recommend for: adventure and experience, seniors, holiday with children, holiday with pet, cultural and sightseeing holiday, romantic holiday

Vicinity of the holiday home: Sauber und Ordentlich

free time activities: Zahlreich vorhanden

shopping facilities: Ausreichend vorhanden

June 2010

Elvira from Dresden

5,0
5 5 5 5 5

Super Anlage! Mal richtig ausspannen am See

Beste gegend von Neuruppin Super Sonnenuntergänge viele Pilze nagelneue Anlage.kommendes jahr sind wir auch jeden fall wieder da!

Danke Elvira

recommend for: adventure and experience, disabled persons, seniors, holiday with children, holiday without car, cultural and sightseeing holiday, holiday for singles, beach holiday, romantic holiday

Vicinity of the holiday home: auch wenn es mal regnet, eine Woche reicht nicht aus
sehr empfehlenswert der Tierpark Kunsterspring und die Fontane Therme (Gesundbrunnen)

free time activities: wer Wassersport, Ruhe, Kultur, Angeln, Radfahren Dampferfahrten Segeln... liebt ist hier genau richtig

shopping facilities: 200m luftlienie ist ein kelines einkaufszentrum mit den wichtigsten ( Schlecker; Becker...) im Lindenzentrum


Contact

Company Ferienhaus /Yachtcharter Neuruppin
Mr. R. Günther

Mr. R. Günther

additional information

listing #: 38931

Last updated: 25.03.2022

Advertisement online since: 13 years, 5 months

URL: https://www.tourist-paradise.com/38931.htm


« » achieves a holiday rating of 5 (rating scale: 1 to 5) at 8 submitted reviews.

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