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Marriott Grand Milan - Milano, Italy

Via Washington 66
Milano, 20146
Nightly Rates (217.90 - 1,584.72)   4 Star
Marriott Grand Milan

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
The modern marble and glass Grand Milan Marriott hotel is a five-star property located in the elegant Art Nouveau district on central Via Washington near the Milano fairgrounds and offers excellent meeting facilities with a well-trained staff. Milan's famous shopping district and the Wagner subway station are within walking distance of the hotel with the business district, main train station and motorway just three miles away in city center. Eighteen meeting rooms are equipped with the latest technology and can accommodate up to one thousand people for banquets or conventions. Wireless Internet access is available in the executive lounge, meeting rooms and public areas of the hotel. Parking is EUR 15 per car per day. Please note maximum occupancy is three people per room with a third person supplement of EUR 60 per night for guest twelve years of age or older.

Marriott Grand Milan


Amenities
  • Babysitting/Child Services

  • Bar/Lounge

  • Concierge

  • 24 Hour Front Desk

  • Hairdryers Available

  • Mini Bar

  • Meeting/Banquet Facilities

  • No Smoking Rooms/Facilities

  • No Smoking Rooms/Facilities

  • Parking

  • Restaurant

  • Room Service

  • Safe Deposit Box

  • Television with Cable

  • Laundry/Valet Services


  • Rate Disclaimer
    Room rates may vary due to availability or season and include tax and service

    Miscellaneous Information
  • Euro is the native currency. 

  • Check in time is 2pm 

  • Check out time is 12noon 

  • Time Zone is  Central European 

  • Opened in  1994 

  • 322  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 7  floors. 


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

    Cancellation Policy
    Twenty-four hours local time prior to arrival to avoid billing of one night room and tax (policy may be more restrictive during special events)

    * Aquarium and Planetarium - 3 miles * Brera's Picture - 2.5 miles * Cenacolo (Last Supper) - 2 miles * Conservatorio Giuseppe Verdi - 3 miles * La Scala - 2.5 miles * Le Varesine - 3 miles * Monza Racing Team - 22 miles * Navigli - 2 miles * Old Cathedral - 3 miles * Pinacoteca Ambrosiana - 2.5 miles * Poldi Pezzoli - 2.5 miles * San Siro Stadium - 3 miles * Sempione Park - 2.5 miles * Sforza Castle - 2.5 miles * Teatro Nazionale - 800 meters

    Related Italy Content

    Stylish, cultured, good-humored and volatile - Italy, with its golden light, stunning landscapes and rich cultural heritage, has inspired poets and painters for centuries. Perhaps more than any other country, it has influenced the course of European development, particularly in culture and political thought.

    Today, besides the renowned cities of Venice, Florence, Siena and Naples, each with its own unique identity and architecture, Italy features romantic medieval hill towns, such as San Gimignano in Tuscany, and unspoilt fishing villages, like Positano
    on the Amalfi coast. Operatic productions are staged in Verona’s ancient amphitheater, while the influence of Federico Fellini is celebrated in Turin’s museum of cinema.

    Throughout the country visitors can find vineyards and cellars to taste fine regional wines, workshops where crafts are produced by hand, and friendly trattorie where simple but superb dishes are served.

    The most important early settlers were the enigmatic Etruscans, but by the third century BC their culture had been displaced by the mighty city state of Rome.

    At its greatest extent, the Roman Empire stretched from Egypt to England and for several centuries conferred on its inhabitants the benefits of the Pax Romana: culture, law, relative peace and comparative prosperity. This sophisticated society left a rich architectural legacy - Rome is still dominated by buildings like the mighty Colosseum.

    In the 15th century, Italy was at the heart of the Renaissance, an extraordinary flowering of art and culture. It produced artists such as Fra Angelico, Raphael, Botticelli, Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci, whose works take pride of place in Italy’s galleries.

    Italy combines art, history and contemporary fashion with stunning natural landscapes: the turquoise waters of Sardinia’s Costa Smeralda offer one of Europe’s most beautiful stretches of sand, sea and sunshine, while the snow-covered slopes of the Dolomite mountains are a haven for winter sports enthusiasts.

    Geography
    Italy is situated in Europe and attached in the north to the European mainland. To the north, the Alps separate Italy from France, Switzerland, Austria and Slovenia. Northern Italy: The Alpine regions, the Po Plain and the Dolomites. Piedmont and Val d’Aosta contain some of the highest mountains in Europe and are good areas for winter sports. Rivers flow down from the mountains passing through the beautiful Italian Lake District (Maggiore, Como, Garda) to the fertile Po Basin, which extends as far south as the bare slopes of the Appennines, and has long been one of Italy’s most prosperous regions. Central Italy: The northern part of the Italian peninsula. Tuscany (Toscana) has a diverse landscape with snow-capped mountains, lush countryside, hills and a long sandy coastline. To the east is Umbria, known as the ‘green heart of Italy’; hilly with broad plains, olive groves and pines, and Le Marche - a region of gentle mountains, rivers and small fertile plains. Further south lies Rome, Italy’s capital city. Within its precincts is the Vatican City. Southern Italy: The south is wilder than the north, with mile upon mile of olive trees, cool forests and rolling hills. Campania consists of flat coastal plains and low mountains, stretching along a rocky coast to the Calabrian border. The islands of Capri, Ischia and Procida in the Tyrrhenian Sea are also part of Campania. Puglia, the ‘heel of the boot’, is a landscape of volcanic hills and isolated marshes. Calabria, the ‘toe’, is wild, heavily forested and thinly populated. The Islands: Sicily (Sicilia), visible across a 3km (2-mile) strait from mainland Italy, is famed for its active volcano Mount Etna and lava fields. Sardinia (Sardegna) has a mountainous landscape, fine sandy beaches and rocky offshore islands.


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