Country Inn & Suites, Albany is located at the intersection of I-94 and Highway 238 North.
Conveniently located near:
Home of the fabled Lake Wobegon with hiking, biking & snowmobile trails (0.5 miles)
Albany 18-hole public golf course (3 blocks)
Kraft Foods (3 blocks)
St. John's University (10 miles)
College of St. Benedicts (15 miles)
Albany Hospital & Medical Center (10 blocks)
Mother of Mercy Nursing Home (4 blocks)
Central Livestock (1 mile)
Albany Pioneer Village (1.5 miles)
St. Cloud University (20 miles)
Minnesota Baseball Hall of Fame Museum (20 miles)
River Lakes Civic Ice Arena (15 miles)
About St. Cloud
Overlooking the mighty Mississippi River, St. Cloud sits 60 miles northwest of the Twin Cities at the center of Minnesota's fastest-growing metropolitan area. With approximately 60,000 residents, St. Cloud (named after a Paris suburb) offers a diversity of culture, accommodations, and activities. Top attractions include Munsinger and Clemens Gardens, with their lush plant life and Mississippi River backdrop, and Stearns History Museum, where the town's past, along with a 1919 auto and a miniature circus, are on display. The renovated Paramount Theater offers terrific entertainment options, and biking and hiking are easily accessible at Quarry Park and on both the Lake Wobegon and Beaver Island Trails. Downtown's tree-lined streets and specialty shops offer small-town charm, as do the Central Business District (listed on the National Historic Registry), Stearns County Courthouse, and The Granite Trio, a sculpture celebrating one of the city's key industries. In the vicinity are also a number of notable universities, including St. Cloud State University, Saint John's University, and the College of St. Benedict.
Did you know?
You can't beat the charm of a historic downtown, and cities with one intact just seem to have a natural center and a source of civic pride. St. Cloud's downtown, although not large, has national historic status. Its architecturally distinctive buildings were constructed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, mainly of red or cream-colored brick.