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Jw Marriott Hotel Mirage City - Cairo, Egypt

Ring Road
Cairo,
Nightly Rates (180.00 - 180.00)   5 Star
Jw Marriott Hotel Mirage City

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
The JW Marriott Hotel Cairo is the city's newest five star hotel and Cairo's only corporate resort, where you can relax, reinvigorate and refresh. A destination for both business and leisure travelers, our hotel features an eighteen hole championship golf course with lakes and lagoons to make your game more challenging, extensive health club facilities, six tennis courts and a themed water park where children can enjoy fun at the beach while their parents relax and soak in the sun. From casual Italian dining to an Oriental experience, there are more than twelve restaurants and bars to satisfy every appetite: the variety is extraordinary! We offer air conditioned limousine service, a business center, the largest ballroom in Cairo, retail shops, valet laundry service and twenty-four hour in-room dining. We invite you to stay in one of our deluxe guest rooms or suites with stunning views of the golf course, swimming complex or waterpark. Each is luxuriously appointed with an in-room safe, satellite television, two direct dial telephones and private balcony. * Located on the Ring Road in the prestigious Heliopolis district, the JW Marriott Hotel is only fifteen minutes from the international airport and thirty minutes from downtown Cairo. We are located within easy reach of all that Cairo offers including the Cairo Museum, convention center and famous Giza Pyramids. Wired high speed Internet access is available in all guest rooms with wireless service in meeting space and public areas of the hotel. Complimentary airport shuttle bus service is provided with advance reservations required twenty-four hours prior to arrival through the hotel direct.

Jw Marriott Hotel Mirage City


Amenities
  • Babysitting/Child Services

  • Bar/Lounge

  • Business Center

  • 24 Hour Front Desk

  • Handicapped Rooms/Facilities

  • Free Parking

  • Hairdryers Available

  • Meeting/Banquet Facilities

  • Pool

  • Parking

  • Parking

  • Restaurant

  • Room Service

  • Safe Deposit Box

  • Shops/Commercial Services

  • Fitness Center or Spa

  • Television with Cable

  • Laundry/Valet Services

  • VIP Rooms/Services


  • Rate Disclaimer
    Room rates may vary due to availability or season and exclude 13.44 percent tax and twelve percent service

    Miscellaneous Information
  • American Dollars is the native currency. 

  • Check in time is 3pm 

  • Check out time is 12noon 

  • Opened in  2003 

  • 428  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 7  floors. 


  • Directions
    Approximately a fifteen minute drive: Take El Orouba Street to El Thawra Street and follow El Thawra Street to Suez Road * Continue straight on Suez Road to the Ring Road and hotel will be on the left Cairo International Airport CAI - 5 miles

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

    Cancellation Policy
    6pm local time day of arrival to avoid billing of one night room and tax (policy may be more restrictive during special events)

    * Cairo International Convention Centre - 4 miles * Cairo Opera House - 15 miles * Camel Market - 18 miles * Citadel Fortress - 12 miles * City of the Dead - 12 miles * Coptic Ciaro - 8 miles * Downtown Cairo (city centre) - 10 miles * Egyptian Museum - 10 miles * Heliopolis City Centre - 4 miles * Khan El Khalili Bazaar - 10 miles * Nile River - 10 miles * Pyramids of Dashur - 22 miles * Pyramids of Giza - 14 miles * Pyramids of Sakkara - 17 miles * World Trade Centre (shopping) - 10 miles

    Related Egypt Content

    Travelers have marvelled at Egypt’s archaeological wonders for centuries, ever since the Ancient Greeks visited the pyramids. Today, millions of tourists are attracted each year to the pyramids, temples, mosques and great monuments of the Nile Valley, as well as the stunning diving resorts of the Red Sea.

    In 430 BC, when Greek historian Herodotos visited the magnificent monuments in Egypt, many of them were already 2,500 years old. Most, from the pyramids of Giza to the astonishingly beautiful temples of Karnak or Philae, or the painted tombs in the
    Valley of the Kings, can still be visited today. The sheer age of this great civilization is mind-blowing.

    The life-giving Nile runs north through the country to the Mediterranean, feeding an emerald ribbon of irrigated fields adjacent to villages shaded by date palms. Whether on a cruise ship or traditional felucca boat, life on the water is a constant visual feast, while the few huge, dusty cities - Cairo, Alexandria, Aswan and Luxor - are a babble of exotic sounds and smells.

    Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheik, on the Red Sea coast, are doors to a magical underwater world of technicolor fish and coral that draws divers from around the world, while other adventurous travelers head inland. Here, you can discover monasteries amid the arid mountains of Sinai or the distant desert oases, home to the hardy nomads whose camel trains still wander the Saharan sands.

    Egypt is at the center of the Arab world and has played a central role in the region’s political situation in modern times. After three wars in 1948, 1967 and 1973, peace was achieved with Israel in 1979 leading to Egypt’s expulsion from the Arab League (they were restored in 1991). Egypt has since played a vital role in the Middle East Peace Process.

    Geography
    Egypt is bordered to the north by the Mediterranean, to the south by Sudan, to the west by Libya, and to the east by the Red Sea and Israel. The River Nile divides the country unevenly in two, while the Suez Canal provides a third division with the Sinai Peninsula. Beyond the highly cultivated Nile Valley and Delta, a lush green tadpole of land that holds more than 90% of the population, the landscape is mainly flat desert, devoid of vegetation apart from the few oases that have persisted in the once fertile depressions of the Western Desert. Narrow strips are inhabited on the Mediterranean coast and on the African Red Sea coast. The coast south of Suez has fine beaches and the coral reefs just offshore attract many divers. The High Dam at Aswan now controls the annual floods that once put much of the Nile Valley under water; it also provides electricity.


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