Hotels in Canada Hotels in Victoria Best Western Plus Carlton Plaza Hotel - Victoria

Carlton Plaza Hotel
3 AAA hotel in Victoria

View prices in
642 Johnson StreetV8W 1M6 Victoria (British Columbia), Canada (show on map)
Worldwide reservation numbers
Phone: +1 (250) 388-5513

Staying experience:

4.4/5
2882 reviewsVerified
If you are a business traveller with preferred rates with Best Western or if you have a Promo Code, please fill in this field:
(8-digit number or promo code)

Please note: The hotel' currency is CAD.
Prices shown here, if in different currency are indicative and may vary according to the exchange rate. Upon confirmation on reservation the amount will be presented in each case in CAD



Description


642 Johnson StreetV8W 1M6 Victoria (British Columbia), Canada (show on map)

Worldwide reservation numbersPhone: +1 (250) 388-5513Fax: +1 (250) 388-5343


Welcome to the Best Western Plus Carlton Plaza Hotel Victoria, a member of the World’s Biggest Hotel Family. We invite you to experience the comforts of the Best Western Plus Carlton Plaza in downtown Victoria.

Take a walk down Government Street and in seven minutes you’ll find yourself amid the Inner Harbor, Royal B.C.

Museum, and Legislature Buildings. We are proud to say that our hotel is part of LoJo, also known as the Lower Johnson district of Victoria.

LoJo is awash with boutique shops, weekly markets, and some of the best restaurants Victoria has to offer.

Head north by foot and in nine minutes you’ll find yourself at the Save on Foods Memorial Arena homes of the Victoria Royals, our WHL hockey team. Our AAA Three Diamond heritage hotel offers 108 newly refreshed rooms that are clean, and comfortable, and come with adjustable heat and air-conditioning. Our suites are equipped with a full fridge, stove-top oven, and kitchen sink as well as a pullout couch, perfect for a family getaway. Enhance your sustainable lifestyle with our new aluminum water bottles, priced at just $3 and conveniently available at the front desk.

Promoting environmental responsibility has never been easier or more accessible. Whether you are staying for business or pleasure the Best Western Plus Carlton Plaza is the place for you to stay in downtown Victoria.

Green rating:

Main services:

Info

Check-In: from 4:00 PM

Check-Out: within 12:00 PM

Services

On premises:

  • 100% smoke-free hotel
  • Restaurant on-site, The Ruby on Johnson
  • 24-hour front desk
  • Barber/beauty shop
  • Ice/vending machines
  • Guest laundry, $2.00, nominal fee 24-hours
  • Safe deposit box
  • Fax services
  • Photocopy services
  • Business center
  • Exercise facility, open from 5 a.m.

    to 12 a.m.

    daily
  • Weight lifting equipment
  • Stationary bike
  • Treadmill
  • Elevator
  • Interior corridor
  • Concierge, service via text message
  • Porterage/bell services
  • Dry cleaning
  • Free wireless internet available in public areas; Free in-room wireless internet access; Free wireless internet access available in public areas and all guest rooms
  • Mail services
  • Valet Parking ONLY, vehicles stored off-site.

    May-September $30 fee, October-April $20 fee
  • Electric vehicle charging station available
  • Hair Salon
  • Watch Repair Shop
  • Cash Machine (ATM)

Nearby:

  • 7 block(s) from Victoria's Inner Harbour, Royal British Columbia Museum, IMAX® Theater, BC Legislature, Miniature World®, Victoria Bug Zoo®, Robert Bateman Centre
  • 2 block(s) from Chinatown, National Historic Site of Canada.

    Oldest Chinatown in Canada, and second-oldest in North America after San Francisco.

    Home to Fan Tan Alley, the narrowest street in Canada - measuring less than 3 feet across at its smallest point.

  • 16.80 kilometer(s) from Butchart Gardens, In 1904, Robert Pim Butchart, a pioneer in the thriving North American cement industry, developed a quarry and built a cement plant at Tod Inlet (on Vancouver Island) to satisfy Portland cement demand from San Francisco to Victoria.

    Jennie Butchart became the company’s chemist.

    As Mr.

    Butchart exhausted limestone deposits, his enterprising wife Jennie made plans to create something of beauty in the exhausted pit.

    Little by little, the quarry blossomed into the spectacular Sunken Garden.

    The renown of Mrs.

    Butchart’s gardening quickly spread.

    By the 1920s more than fifty thousand people visited her garden each year.

    Their house grew into a comfortable, luxurious showplace, with a bowling alley, paneled billiard room and a wonder of its age, a self-playing Aeolian pipe organ.

    Today, it houses the Dining Room Restaurant, offices, and rooms still used for family entertaining.

    In 2004, The Gardens was designated a National Historic Site of Canada.

  • 1.70 kilometer(s) from Craigdarroch Castle, Built 1890, constructed as a family residence for the wealthy coal baron Robert Dunsmuir and his family.

    The four-story Craigdarroch Castle still has lavish furnishings from the 1890s and is known for its stained-glass and intricate woodwork.

    The Castle is currently owned by the Craigdarroch Castle Historical Museum Society.

    Craigdarroch is an example of the bonanza castle, a phrase used to refer to oversized mansions built as symbols of success for wealthy North American industrialists during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

  • 12.50 kilometer(s) from Hatley Castle & Gardens, When James Dunsmuir purchased Hatley Park from Roland Stuart in 1907, he was British Columbia’s Lieutenant-Governor, and had also been Premier of the province.

    Son of the wealthy coal baron, Robert Dunsmuir, James is said to have demanded of the architect Samuel Maclure: It doesn’t matter what it costs, just build me what I want.

    What Dunsmuir envisioned was a working farm with a dairy, piggery, stables, grazing and hunting lands, and at the centre of it all, a grand home for his wife to entertain Victoria’s high society and for James to enjoy the life of a country gentleman.

    On May 1st, 1910 the Dunsmuirs officially moved in to Hatley Castle, then the largest private residence on the West Coast.

  • 6 block(s) from Save on Foods Memorial Centre, The Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre is the largest arena in British Columbia outside of Vancouver.

    It is primarily used for ice hockey, and currently the home of the Victoria Royals of the Western Hockey League.

    It is also used for concerts and other special events such as figure skating, curling, plays, trade shows and conferences.

    The arena has hosted many musical and performance acts, as well as guest speakers, sporting tournaments, and other events.






Back to top