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Ruths Hotel
Skagen is at the very top of Denmark, the narrow finger of Jutland that tapers to a point where the Skagerrak and the Kattegat meet in a visible line of competing currents, the two seas different colours in the right light, the meeting point itself a spectacle that people travel specifically to stand beside. The town has been drawing artists since the 1870s, when a group of Danish and Scandinavian painters discovered that the quality of light at this latitude, filtered through sea air and bouncing off white sand dunes, was unlike anywhere else they knew. The Skagen painters, PS Krøyer, Michael and Anna Ancher, Laurits Tuxen and their circle, produced some of the most beloved paintings in Danish cultural history here, their work documenting the particular golden-hour light on the beach, the fishing community, the long summer evenings. The Skagen Museum holds the finest collection of their work, and the town itself has changed less than you might expect: the characteristic yellow-painted houses under red-tiled roofs, the dunes that buried a church to its tower in drifting sand, the wide beaches facing both seas, the sense of being at the edge of something. Skagen is a summer place for Danes in the way that certain coastal towns are summer places for the people of a country, invested with a cultural affection that makes it more than just a nice destination. Gammel Skagen, Old Skagen, is the quieter part of town, nearer the dunes and the western beach, where Ruths Hotel has stood since 1904. Emma and Hans Christian Ruth opened it that year as Badepensionat Vesterhus, and the family story that followed is one of the more quietly extraordinary in Danish hotel history: in January 1909, Hans Christian Ruth was among a group who attempted to save the crew of the Norwegian brig Speed, wrecked in a winter storm off the Skagen coast. The only survivor of the crew of eight, Johan Olaf Dahler, was brought back to the hotel to recover, where he fell in love with the Ruths' daughter Dagmar. They married in 1912 and spent the next sixty years running the hotel together. The property was acquired in 2003 by Swedish businessman Jörgen Philip-Sörensen, who brought in French chef Michel Michaud the following year and elevated the gastronomic programme to what it has since become: one of the finest hotel restaurants in Denmark. The hotel today occupies four converted houses, Vesterhus, the Seaside House, the Artist House and Ruths Strandhotel, their white-painted facades and wooden floors and blue and green accents constituting a precise visual expression of classic Danish coastal elegance. Fifty-two rooms and suites across the buildings, all differently configured, the best with balconies or terraces looking toward the dunes and the sea. Works by the Skagen painters hang throughout. The wellness area has a heated therapy pool, sauna, steam room and spa treatments. Bicycles are available for guests. The beach is five minutes on foot. The gastronomic offer is the hotel's strongest argument: Ruths Gourmet, open from spring through September, serves a tasting menu of considerable ambition rooted in the produce of the region, the North Sea and the Jutlandic larder, overseen by a kitchen that has consistently been regarded as among the best in northern Denmark. The brasserie handles more relaxed dining year-round with French and Nordic inflections, and the hotel's own bakery produces the breakfast bread and pastries daily. The guests are well-travelled Danes who have been coming to Skagen for decades and for whom Ruths is simply the address, alongside the Scandinavian and Northern European couples and families who find that the combination of a century of hotel history, the Skagen light, a genuinely serious kitchen and the northernmost point of Denmark constitutes an entirely sufficient reason to make the journey. The short version: A historic beachside hotel in Gammel Skagen, opened in 1904 and anchored by a story of a shipwreck, a rescue and a love affair that defined the family who ran it for sixty years. Fifty-two rooms across four white-painted houses, works by the Skagen painters throughout, a heated therapy pool, and Ruths Gourmet, one of the finest hotel restaurants in northern Denmark. Five minutes from the beach where the two seas meet. The definitive Skagen address, for those who understand why this particular corner of Denmark matters.
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What to Know Before You Go
A few notes on your visit.
Ruths Hotel, located in Skagen, ensures a heartwarming stay.
The hotel boasts 52 tastefully designed rooms, a friendly reception, and a comfortable ambiance.
The hotel offers complimentary WiFi in public areas and has facilities for disabled guests.
A cozy fireplace and a variety of shops within the premises add to the charm.
Guests can unwind in the lovely garden, TV room, or the library.
Complimentary parking is provided for guests arriving by car.
Guests can avail a range of services including babysitting, laundry, and room service.
The hotel offers bicycle rental service for guests eager to explore the surrounding area.

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