After the first three motor hotels in Sweden expansion abroad followed in 1965. The Scandinavian holidaymaker should be able to drive to the Italian coast using Esso Motor Hotels during the journey. The Hotels were situated in a one-day driving distance from each other. The northern end of this "Esso route" was
Mölndal in Sweden which opened in 1966, the southern end was
Brescia in Italy which opened in 1965. The Swedish-Danish bordercrossing was made by ferry at
Helsingborg, from Denmark to Germany the route followed the, then new,
Vogelfluglinie. In Germany the
HaFraBa autobahn route was chosen and south of
Basel the route of the present
E25 through Switzerland, France and the new
Mont Blanc Tunnel. In Italy Brescia was reached through Valle d'Aosta and the Autostrada Serenissima. The intermediate hotels were situated in Hannover, Courmayeur, Freiburg and Glostrup (Copenhagen). From Brescia the tourists could follow their way to the various resorts on the Adriatic in
Italy as well as in
Yugoslavia. More differentiation was created in 1967 by two more Hotels, Heidelberg and Sindelfingen in the south of Germany. In Sweden the hotels at Nörrköping and Jönköping were opened in 1967 too. These two enabled the travellers from and to Stockholm to follow the direct route from Stockholm to Helsingborg instead of the longer one via Laxå and Mölndal. In 1969 the southern end shifted to
Florence, but Esso's Italian partner
Pavesi built five hotels between Florence and
Sicily. From the initial plan for the route from
Trondheim in the North to Sicily in the South only the hotel in Trondheim was added afterwards. ==Expansion==