This is the most beautiful place I feel in Europe. The environment is super good. The air is superb. Passing by this watch store, I came in and saw the style I always liked. The price is much cheaper than domestic. I am more entangled. I thought about it in the store for more than an hour. The service staff here is not impatient at all. Always a particularly warm service throughout. There is also free coffee. Candy. Especially a waiter from Beijing. Super enthusiastic. The reason for the last purchase is mostly because of their enthusiasm. Wonderful journey. I fell in love with that feeling.
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This is the most beautiful place I feel in Europe. The environment is super good. The air is superb. Passing by this watch store, I came in and saw the style I always liked. The price is much cheaper than domestic. I am more entangled. I thought about it in the store for more than an hour. The service staff here is not impatient at all. Always a particularly warm service throughout. There is also free coffee. Candy. Especially a waiter from Beijing. Super enthusiastic. The reason for the last purchase is mostly because of their enthusiasm. Wonderful journey. I fell in love with that feeling.
Located near the Zug Bell Tower and Colin Square, Lohri Mansion at Neugasse 27 dates back to the early 16th century and is the oldest goldsmith shop in the entire continent. Zug City enjoys a long-standing goldsmith craftsmanship atmosphere as a jewellery town known in Europe from ancient times to the present, and the first floor of the Lohri Mansion records the history of the longest goldsmith workshop in Europe. The house was already the most expensive private mansion in the state of Zug at a cost of about 10 million Swiss francs in the early eighteenth century. The Lohri family, a local jeweller from Zug, is the current owner of the house. The Lohri Mansion is one of the few Napoleonic imperial buildings in Europe that survived the war completely, with the original architecture of 1620 left over from the foundations and arches. The second floor of the bungalow is now free of charge as the main private collection, and it displays rare antique jewelry from around Europe from 1780 to 1950, including the emerald ring of former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, and the now extinct Mississippi pearl. Photos of Princess Sissi and inscriptions of the item pendant box.