Zink Haus Villa: Cabernet

Downtown NB

House | Sleeps 6 | Bedrooms 3 | Bathrooms 3 | 2000 Sqft

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Property Description

The Cabernet Villa features 3 bedrooms with king-sized beds that all have outside covered porches for privacy and relaxation.  There are 3 bathrooms on site with roomy stand-in showers. A clawfoot tub is situated in one of the bathrooms and offers an opportunity to unwind and decompress.  A charming living area offers a gas fireplace, stereo and comfortable leather couches for maximum unwinding. With a large television and sofa, the media room offers a chance to watch movies or sporting events with your group.  Some of the bedrooms have large televisions as well. Dining in the kitchen is made easier with a Keurig coffee maker, blender, as well as basic cookware.

The Zink Haus property is a historic part of downtown New Braunfels! Scroll down to the bottom of this page to read about its unique history and where each villa’s name originated!

The villas are available to be rented separately and all together. To learn more about the property and inquire about renting the entire Zink Haus property click here.

All of the Zink Haus Villas are supplied with bed linens, basic cookware, laundry detergent, dish detergent, toilet paper, enough coffee pods to get you started and paper towels.

Pet Policy: Zink Haus Villas welcomes pets upon approval from management. The property requires a $50 pet fee per animal and some additional fees and/ or cleaning fees may apply and fines may be assessed for undeclared pets.  Please contact us directly to coordinate arrangements for your pet’s stay.

Golf Carts and Tubes Available To Rent Upon Request

*For stays of one week or longer, additional cleaning/maid service may be required and/or requested.

Check-In: 4 PM
Check-Out: 11 AM

Location

The Zink Haus Villas’ History

Francois Guilbeau, Jr (1813-1879) was the original property owner.
A successful entrepreneur and businessman, Guilbeau was also a frontier hero before he became an international hero.  According to one account, the legendary marksman was “barred from the important shooting matches in San Antonio [because he could] cut a playing card in half with a dueling pistol while the card was held edgeways between the fingers of an assistant.” In his report from San Antonio entitled Du Texas (“from Texas”), published in 1857, Victor P. Considerant said that around 1850 his friend Guilbeau had planted two banana roots in San Antonio. His gardener covered them with a foot of dirt in the winter, permitting them to yield abundantly; from them, thousands grew.  A horticulturist of epic reputation,  but Guilbeau’s collaborated with Jules Poinsard (1814-1885), the agricultural commissioner from France to Texas, who was also the architect and builder of the Guilbeau home; nurseryman Matthew N. Knox; and viticulturist Thomas Volney Munson to save the wine industry in France and the rest of Europe from phylloxera. Knowing the Texas mustang grape to be resistant to this disease, Guilbeau contracted with Knox to harvest vine cuttings, which were bundled and boxed in his warehouse, carted to Galveston by ox train, and shipped to Europe to be grafted onto ailing vines. Between 1876 and 1878, Guilbeau shipped several hundred tons of mustang grapevine cuttings, enabling the European vine industry to survive. The results of his enterprise are perpetuated in the rootstocks of European wines.  The Zink Haus villas were named after wine varietals as a tribute to Guilbeau’s contribution to the international wine industry.