go to homepage
   

Faulty Towers
Beautiful Bed & Breakfast
Wallington
VIC, 3221
Australia

Homestead Avenue
Wallington, Victoria, 3221, Australia
Phone: 0427 105 790
Fax 5250 1198
Email: info@faultytowers.com.au
Web: www.faultytowers.com.au
     

 

Faulty Towers offers two luxurious 4.5 star King Bed Spa Suites, and a 2 queen bed self-contained cottage. We spoil you with private accommodation catering for travellers and romantic breaks. The suites are decorated beautifully, want for nothing and sorry, but you will never want to leave.

Rooms are well separated and children are well catered for. House trained pets are allowed in the cottage.

We are surrounded by grass trees, next to bushland.  Your windows open giving you lovely fresh country air and the reverse cycle air conditioning will keep you feeling comfortable when nights are a little cool or warm. 

Your room is adorned with elegant antique furnishings and is thoroughly cleaned between guests with natural plant based cleaners for your well being.  

The crystal cabinet has a range of lovely old things should you need to buy a gift … for yourself of course! 

All appliances, including TV, DVD & fridge, and crockery are new.  In the bathroom we have included a hair dryer & shavers for your convenience.

It is a short walk to the trendy local café / restaurant The Purple Duck and attractions like Adventure Golf and A Maze’n Games,  Adventure Park is a drive just down the road.

To protect guests privacy, please don't drive onto property until you have a booking.

 

 

 


Accommodation

The first suite to open provides for smaller families or couples with a Luxurious Latex King Bed and a large bathroom with Multi-Jet 2 Person Spa Bath.

The second King Bed Spa Suite is upstairs and has a range of configurations to suit your wishes with a lovely a treed view.

Children are catered for with the use of a roll out and/or on the sofa bed in the suite's sitting room.

We further look after your sleep by providing the softest mattress comforters and the best bed linen available.

Accommodation includes an in room hearty continental breakfast at your own antique dining table, quality tea & coffee (including de-cafe, caro & cocoa) and nibbles. Additional mini bar snacks and drinks are reasonably priced. You are welcome to bring take away in the evening and use your microwave to reheat if you like.


Location
     Wallington, a rural locality on the Bellarine Peninsula, is 4 km. east-south-east of Geelong.


Rates

Please check with us


Wallington


Wallington came into existence when a landholder, Fairfax Fenwick, subdivided part of his property on the south side of the road to Queenscliff in 1853, and named the subdivision after Wallington in Hertfordshire, England. A Wallington hotel was opened in 1855. Another hotel opened later, becoming famed for its gardens, and for strawberries and cream for travellers to the popular Queenscliff resort. There were also an extensive orchard, hay and corn stores, a store and a post office. The hotel continued until the 1930s, a period when Queenscliff was going out of fashion.

A school was opened in 1866, closing at an unknown date, and the State school was opened in 1900.

To the north of Wallington it Curlewis, remembered for its quaintly named Help Me Through The World Hotel. It had a strong Catholic community with a Catholic school (1851) and church.

To the south of Wallington is Fenwick, named after the original landholder. The place is marked by a church, and urban growth from Ocean Grove encroaches on its boundaries.

Wallington and Fenwick occupy one of the most scenically attractive parts of the Bellarine Peninsula, with well-treed, undulating landscape with deep, well-drained soils. The land is intensively farmed, growing potatoes, peas, fruit and, in the past, asparagus. In the 1930s there was a Leopold and Wallington District Fruit and Vegetable Growers' Association. The fruit-growing tradition continues with the Wallington Strawberry Festival.

The attractive landscape and its proximity to Geelong and coastal beaches has drawn rural residential developments, mostly on allotments of 1 to 5 ha. The community centre, however, is not large, having a school, a hall and a recreation reserve.