This one bedroom apartment of 40 m2 is convenient for up to 4 guests. There is one double bed in the bedroom and one double sofa-bed in the living room. The apartment is well located, near popular Gran Vía street, where you can do your shopping. Also nearby you will find Chueca district, a cosmopolitan place, full of nice fashionable shops, sophisticated restaurants, modern discos and clubs, and of course museums like the Municipal Museum and the Romantic Museum. We have also in the same building other similar apartments: Apartment Piamonte Residence 1E, Apartment Piamonte Residence S, Apartment Piamonte Residence 1A.
The apartment Piamonte Residence 2A is situated on the 2nd floor, in a building with elevator.
Apartment description: Bedroom: Double bed, built-in wardrobes, night tables, lamp.
Living room with kitchen: Cookware, kitchen utensils, washing machine, TV, oven, electric kettle, fridge, coffee maker, coffee table, air conditioning, table and chairs, double sofa-bed, 2 x armchair.
Bathroom: Hair Dryer, toilet, shower, washbasin, mirror. General facilities: Hair dryer, bed linen, towels, DVD, Internet connection, air conditioning, cell phone rentals.
Address:
Calle de Piamonte 7, Madrid
Nearby points of interest:
- Chueca District: Chueca is a neighborhood in Madrid located just to the north of the downtown core and old city, centered around the Plaza de Chueca and Chueca metro station. Chueca is one of the most fashionable and cosmopolitan areas of Madrid with many shops and boutiques of both international and independent designers also as chic cafes. - Chueca Metro station: Metro line 5. - Torres de Colon: Twin towers in the Plaza de Colon, an important commercial center in Madrid, the towers were designed by the architect Antonio Lamela. - Plaza de Colon: Located in the Alonso Martinez district of Madrid, this plaza and its fountain commemorate the explorer Christopher Columbus, whose name in Spanish was Cristobal Colon. - National Archaeological Museum of Spain: Located beside the Plaza de Colon (Columbus Square), the museum was founded in 1867 by a Royal Decree of Isabella II, and its purpose was to be a depository for numismatic, archaeological, ethnographical and decorative art collections compiled by the Spanish monarchs. The current collection includes, among others, Pre-historic, Celtic, Iberian, Greek and Roman antiquities and medieval (Visigothic, Muslim and Christian) objects.
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