Mór’s Lamberg Castle Cultural Center, Library, and Museum Exhibition Venue is shaping a lively 2026 in the heart of town at 8060 Mór, Szent István Square (Szent István tér) 5. If you’re planning a day trip or a slow weekend on the historic Mór wine route, circle these dates and explore a district where Swabian roots, boutique stays, and small-lot wines meet easygoing small-town charm.
Dates To Mark
April 30, 2026 brings Book Club – Theme: Women to Lamberg Castle (Lamberg-kastély). Expect a thoughtful session in a classic setting right on Szent István Square (Szent István tér). Summer turns crafty and story-filled with two kids’ camps: Kerekítem-gombolyítom Handicraft Camp from July 6 to July 10, and Fairy-Tale Camp from August 10 to August 14. Both run in Mór, inviting creative hands and big imaginations.
Where You’ll Stay
Tucked into a quiet, nearly 300-year-old street in central Mór, a regional-style boutique hotel blends nostalgia with comfort. Its 25 rooms and 5 apartments are furnished partly with painted and carved Austrian pieces echoing the 1700s, reflecting the local Swabian aesthetic. Some rooms lean into domestic Old German furniture, while one corridor lines up in confident Neo-Baroque. It’s a time-travel vibe without skimping on rest.
On the town’s edge, a wellness hotel looks across to the Vértes and Bakony ranges, complete with its own equestrian park and indoor riding hall. Inside: 31 rooms, 4 suites, a breakfast room, wellness facilities, and a pool bar. Rooms carry the modern elegance of Austrian Voglauer design. For a flourish, the honeymoon room swaps sleek lines for Austrian folk-style farmhouse furniture and a canopied bed. It’s romance with a mountain view.
Prefer practical and central? A guesthouse in Mór’s wine-district downtown runs year-round with 1-, 2-, and 3-bed rooms. Air-conditioned superior rooms come with private baths and TVs, plus an apartment wing with bath and kitchen that can take an extra bed. With space for 50 guests, it’s group-friendly. A closed car park, on-request secure storage, free Wi‑Fi throughout, full accessibility, and an elevator tick all the boxes.
For community warmth, the House of Serving Love, maintained by the Mór Reformed Church, offers lodging for 39 guests year-round. Linens and towels are provided, and the well-equipped house doubles as an excellent forest-school base in autumn, spring, and winter for visiting classes.
What You’ll Taste
Traditional Swabian flavors come together at Lovas Inn (Lovas Vendéglő), part of the equestrian park. The dining room blends old Austrian style with half-timbered (Fachwerk) touches, using 150-year-old pine and crest-stamped bricks with modern architectural accents. It’s comfort cooking with local wines in an atmosphere that feels crafted, not curated.
Right in the city center, ARA Restaurant serves Monday to Saturday, 11:00–22:00, winter or summer. On good-weather days, grab a garden seat and settle into relaxed plates that suit an unhurried afternoon or a pre-evening stroll.
Ezerjó Restaurant, opposite the Holy Cross Hungarian Church, is a local favorite known for a standout kitchen. It’s a go-to for family lunches, romantic dinners, solid weekday menus, and private events from birthdays to weddings. Expect AC, a 100-person main hall, a 50-person private room, and a winterized terrace for 45 guests—spaces that flex to fit the party you actually want.
Wine Roots, Small Lots, Big Character
Mór is a historic capital of one of Hungary’s classic wine regions. Here, deep cellars and young vintners share the same slopes. A family winery founded in 1991 cultivates 25 hectares, focusing on specialties in small batches over mass-market bottles. Across their nearly 300-year-old cellars, they age current vintages alongside a museum collection of historically significant Mór wines. Year-round, their Wine Museum hosts tastings, exhibits of winemaking tools, and cellar tours—an easy primer on the region’s grape-and-glass traditions.
A newer collective spirit hums at a small outfit launched in 2013 by a group of young winemakers, now working 3 hectares. Their aim: highlight the vineyard’s character and keep wines distinctive. It’s site-driven thinking, bottled with care.
Mór’s wine order keeps the heritage heartbeat strong: maintaining and boosting regional viticulture values, upholding professional standards in wine culture, appearing at St. George’s Day events, wine competitions, and knighthood ceremonies, and co-organizing the Mór Wine Days (Móri Bornapok) festival while staying closely connected to neighboring wine orders.
Family cellars open doors wide with a simple promise: wine, happiness, sunset, dogs, friends, and a lot of Ezerjó. Expect tastings, wine dinners, and team-building events, with each glass reflecting the place and the people who made it. One producer simply says: visit the wine’s homeland—and means it.
Frey Cellar, a family winery since 1993 grounded in 300 years of local Swabian tradition, blends classic and reductive techniques with quality grapes. Their specialty is wine tourism on Mór’s historic cellar row, where a protected, heritage-listed cellar hosts tours and tastings with optional rustic cold platters—simple, generous hospitality alongside thoughtful pours.
Friday Winery adds a modern spark: an engineer couple tending 0.5 hectare in the Csóka vineyard, making barrel-aged, California-style-leaning Ezerjó and Chardonnay. Their sparkling Ezerjó is a bright pick, not just for Friday nights. Orders and tasting events are part of the rhythm.
And if you’re looking to go deeper, there’s dedicated viticulture and oenology consulting in Mór. Whether you’re a curious novice, a collector, or a budding grower, the region meets you where you are—with a pour, a plate, and a story.
Good To Know
Organizers reserve the right to change dates and programs. For the Lamberg Castle Cultural Center: 8060 Mór, Szent István Square (Szent István tér) 5. Pack a notebook for the book club, a craft apron for the kids’ camps, and an extra evening for the cellars—you’ll want it.





