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Marriott Executive Apartments Longin Center - Prague, Czech

V Tunich 3
Prague, 12000
Nightly Rates (173.91 - 262.18)   3 Star
Marriott Executive Apartments Longin Center

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
When business takes you away from home for a month or more, Marriott Executive Apartments provide the ideal combination of business convenience, home-style living and the indulgence of hotel service in a variety of gateway cities worldwide. We know how to help ease you into your new environment and be productive the moment you arrive. Offering fully furnished luxury accommodations ranging from studios to three bedroom apartments, Marriott Executive Apartments feature fully equipped kitchens, fitness center, housekeeping and twenty-four hour concierge and security services. * Marriott Executive Apartments Longin Center is a modern apartment hotel ideally situated in the heart of the Czech Republic's capital city between Charles and Wenceslas Squares. This prime location in Prague's business district and transportation hub offers easy access to public transit with several subway stations just a few minutes walk from the hotel. Also within walking distance are banks and financial offices, the National Museum, restaurants and shopping.

Marriott Executive Apartments Longin Center


Amenities
  • Babysitting/Child Services

  • Bar/Lounge

  • Business Center

  • Coffee Maker in Room

  • Concierge

  • 24 Hour Front Desk

  • Modem Lines in Room

  • Modem Lines in Room

  • Pets Allowed

  • Parking

  • Safe Deposit Box

  • Fitness Center or Spa

  • Laundry/Valet Services


  • Rate Disclaimer
    Marriott Executive Apartments offer all the comforts and conveniences of home. Please click on the reservations icon to receive current rates and availability. Nightly rate is based on a continuous length of stay and excludes five percent value added tax and service. Early departure may result in a rate change.

    Miscellaneous Information
  • Euro is the native currency. 

  • Check in time is 3pm 

  • Check out time is 12noon 

  • Opened in  2000 

  • 53  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 7  floors. 


  • Directions
    Follow signs to Centrum (city center) and stay on Europska Street to Vitezne Namesti * Take first right onto Svatovitska Street then turn left onto Milady Horakove Street * Continue past the stadium and turn right to Letensky Tunnel * Pass through the tunnel and continue across the bridge * Turn left at traffic light then left again onto Nove Mlyny Street * Continue to end of the road and turn right onto Nabrezi Ludvika Svobody * Proceed to first traffic light and turn right onto Holbova * Continue straight to Klimentska and turn right to Wilsonova * Proceed straight through two crossroads and after second one turn right onto Holkova * Take first right onto V Tunich 9 - Marriott Executive Apartments is the light blue building on the left Ruzyne International Airport PRG - 9 miles

    Guarantee Policy
    Credit card guarantee required (deposit or prepayment may be required during special events)

    Cancellation Policy
    Seven days prior to arrival to avoid billing of two nights room and tax (policy may be more restrictive during special events)

    * Charles Bridge - 2 miles * Jewish Quarter - 2 miles * Mala Strana - 3 miles * National Museum - 1 mile * Old Town Square - 2 miles * Petrin-Smau Eiffel Tower - 4 miles * Prague Castle - 4 miles * State Opera - 1.5 miles * Theatre of Estates - 2 miles * Vysehrad - 3 miles * Wenceslas Square - 1 mile

    Related Czech Republic Content

    A historic jewel hidden away at the heart of Europe, the Czech Republic packs a lot of punch for such a small country. No bigger than Scotland or South Carolina, it’s crammed with fairytale castles, medieval towns, elegant spa resorts and scenic national parks. And on top of all that, it’s the birthplace of the world’s finest beer.

    Part of Czechoslovakia until the ’Velvet Divorce’ of 1993, the Czech Republic encompasses the ancient lands of Bohemia and Moravia, and boasts a rich cultural heritage represented by the likes
    of classical composer Antonin Dvorak and writer Franz Kafka.

    Almost everyone who visits the Czech Republic goes to Prague, with its imposing castle, great museums and galleries, jazz clubs and concerts and other attractions. Many day trips are possible from here, including the spa resort of Karlovy Vary, the historic towns of Mělník and Kutná Hora, and castles like Karlštejn and Konopiště.

    But the rest of the country has just as much to offer the independent traveller, with no fewer than 11 UNESCO World Heritage sites including the picture-postcard town of Český Krumlov, the chateaux and landscaped gardens of Lednice-Valtice, and the Renaissance architecture of Telč.

    Among the most beautiful scenic areas are the Šumava National Park in the southwest, which takes in the forested mountains and lakes around the headwaters of the Vltava River, the wierd and wonderful rock pinnacles and gorges of the Adršpach-Teplice Rocks in the northeast, and the spectacular caves and underground rivers of the Moravian Karst in the southeast.

    The rich agricultural area of Moravia in the eastern half of the country offers rolling ranges of wooded hills, vineyards, folk art and yet more castles. Here wine is more popular than beer - a specialty of Bohemia - and life moves at an even more relaxed pace.

    Geography
    The Czech Republic is a landlocked country situated in central Europe, sharing frontiers with Germany in the west, Poland in the north, the Slovak Republic in the east and Austria in the south. Covering only about one-third of the area of the United Kingdom, the country is hilly and picturesque.

    The western two-thirds of the country is known as Bohemia, and consists of a vast river basin fringed by hills and mountains. The Czech Republic’s longest river, the Labe, rises in the Krkonoše Mountains in the northeast, on the border with Poland, and flows south, then west, then north into Germany where it becomes the River Elbe. These mountains are also home to the country’s highest summit, Sněęka (1,602m/5,262ft).

    Prague sits almost in the middle of Bohemia on the River Vltava, which flows into the Labe just to the north of the city. The Vltava rises in the forested Šumava hills that run along the country’s southern border with Austria. The plains to the north of Prague are bordered by the Krušné Hory (Ore Mountains, named for the iron ore and other minerals found there).

    The eastern third of the Czech Republic is known as Moravia. This region is also based on a river basin, that of the Morava River, which rises in the northern hills near the Polish border and flows south to join the Danube at Bratislava. The main city of Moravia is Brno, the second-largest in the Czech Republic.


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