Description
Bright and sunny apartment, with a view to the Vatican Museums, renovated a few steps from St. Peter’s Square / Vatican Museums and the OTTAVIANO metro A stop. It is the fifth floor with lift of an elegant historic building, furnished with care and equipped with every comfort including air conditioning, Smart TV, dishwasher and washing machine.
It can accommodate up to 7 people (on request), with 2 double bedrooms ( sofa bed too), 1 single room, 2 bathrooms, living room and equipped kitchen.
USEFUL INFO
– Check-in is from 4pm to 10pm. If you plan to arrive earlier, please let us know in advance, we will do everything to accommodate you. For arrivals after 10.00 pm an extra cost of €30.00 will be applied, while we remind you that on the day of departure the apartment must be vacated by 10.00 am
– The tourist tax is included in the proposed price; is equal to €6/night per person (free for children under 10 years old).
– Please follOw the good rules that everyone has in their own home and for a peaceful life in a condominium; respect rest times, from 2pm to 4pm and after 10pm.
– Upon your arrival you will be welcomed by me or one of my colleagues. In any case, we speak English and will be happy to explain to you how to use everything in the house and how to enjoy the neighborhood.
– Sheets and towels are provided.
PRATI DISTRICT
Prati is an elegant neighborhood of Rome which, with its refined boutiques, restaurants with refined cuisine and trendy clubs, is one of the most loved meeting places for young Romans who meet here for a simple aperitif, for a gourmet dinner or for shop in via Cola di Rienzo, one of the main shopping streets of the city.
Located on the right bank of the Tiber, a few steps from the Vatican and St. Peter’s Basilica, the district owes its name to the meadows of Castello which, adjacent to Hadrian’s Mausoleum, were the place where the Romans arrived by carriage or by river to a pleasant outing.
After the unification of Italy and the proclamation of Rome as capital, the territory was affected by an intense urbanization work carried out by the Turin bourgeoisie who arrived in the city from the old capital. The buildings in the district mainly reflect the architectural dictates of the period: the Umbertine Style, with a clear Piedmontese imprint, with its massive and imposing buildings; the lightest and most refined Art Nouveau style with its precious references to the gracefulness of the natural and animal world.