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Mayflower Hotel - Beirut, Lebanon

Yafet Street
Beirut, 113-5304
Nightly Rates (70.00 - 120.00)   3 Star
Mayflower Hotel

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
The Mayflowers Hamra location,so convenient for the city,offers you walking access to the famous shopping street,restaurants,cafe,banks,the AUB it's an ideal choice for business travellers and holidays makers alike. All rooms generate a relaxing and peaceful atmosphere. All rooms are fully climatised with indiviual control,Direct International dial telephone,televison with satellite television,Minibars,private balconies. The Mayflower features a dining room with international food,and offers English breakfast at request.Also a famous English pub "Duke Of Wellington" with it's equisite English Rolls,Spring Rolls etc. A private conference room for small meetings.A roof top swimming pool to enjoy the sun on top of city. Same day laundry/daily tours/car rental available at front desk.

Mayflower Hotel


Amenities
  • 120 AC

  • Business Center

  • Air Conditioned

  • Casino

  • City Center

  • Balcony

  • High speed internet access

  • Bar/Lounge

  • Parking

  • Barber Shop

  • Fitness Center or Spa

  • Barber/Beauty Shop

  • Porters

  • Boating

  • Boutiques

  • Car Rental Desk

  • Conference Facilities

  • Coffee Shop

  • Currency Exchange

  • 24 Hour Front Desk

  • Disco

  • Doctor on Call

  • Drugstore

  • Fishing

  • Florist

  • Golf

  • International Direct Dial

  • Jogging Track

  • Guest Laundromat

  • Guest Laundromat

  • Lounge

  • Maid Service

  • On the Marina

  • Mini Bar

  • In Room Movies

  • Multilingual

  • Nursery for Children

  • Free Newspaper

  • News Stand

  • Outdoor Pool

  • Bus Parking

  • Indoor Parking

  • Valet Parking

  • Refrigerator

  • Restaurant

  • Room Service

  • Safe Deposit Box

  • Scuba Diving

  • Secretarial Service

  • Skiing

  • Telephone

  • Tour Desk

  • TV

  • Television with Cable

  • Wake-up Service

  • Wind Surfing

  • Water Skiing


  • Room Information
  • Standard Room

  • Standard Rooms consist of one or more rooms of the following types: Single Bed with bathroom, Twin Beds with bathroom, Double Bed with bathroom, Queen Bed with bathroom

    Rate Disclaimer
    Room rate ranges are a general guideline. Specific rates will be displayed based on your day of arrival and room rates available. Click on the "Book It" icon to view specific rate information, guarantee and cancel policy. To speak with a reservation agent, please call 1 800 207-6900 USA and Canada. If calling from outside the U.S.A., see our international reservation phone numbers at www.hotelbook.com/brands/HB/bookit.htm

    Miscellaneous Information
  • American Dollars is the native currency. 

  • 85  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 7  floors. 


  • Directions
    Beirut Int'l Airport BEY 10 km, Jounieh 20 km, Saida 20 km, Casino 25 km, Byblos 35 km, Tripoli 50 km

    Guarantee Policy
    A credit card is required to book online. Peak seasons may require your card is charged in advance. Reading the rate rules after selecting your rate will indicate if your card will be charged. This information will appear in your email confirmation.

    Cancellation Policy
    Subject to the discretion of the hotel, the credit card provided may be charged if the reservation is canceled after the cancellation deadline has passed or if the guest fails to arrive. The cancellation policy will appear after selecting rate rules.


    Related Lebanon Content

    Lebanon, over the course of history, provided an inaccessible haven for tribes and religious groups escaping from repression and persecution in other parts of the Middle East: the Maronites, Christians; the Greek Orthodox Christians; the Shia Muslims; and the Druze, a heretical Muslim sect founded in the 10th century.

    Since its independence from France in 1943, these disparate communities cohabited in relative peace with political power divided between Christians, Shia and Sunni Muslims. On this basis, Lebanon developed a thriving economy based on providing business services for other countries
    in the region. This situation prevailed until the 1970s when the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), which had been expelled from Jordan in 1971, established itself in Lebanon with the tacit agreement of the Lebanese. The influx of a large new community with a powerful armed wing upset the relatively fragile political balance in Lebanon. The PLO’s presence ultimately led to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1978 and 1982.

    By then Lebanon had been engulfed in a six-year civil war between right-wing Christian militias (the Falange and the southern militia led by Saad Haddad, and later the forces led by General Michel Aoun) and various alignments of Muslim and Palestinian forces. Among the latter, the most important were the Amal movement and the more radical, Iranian-inspired Hezbollah organization. Syrian troops also moved in shortly after the war started.

    The Israelis withdrew in early 1985 to a self-declared ‘security zone’ in the south from which they withdrew in 2000. Despite still having a strong influence in Lebanon, Syria withdrew its troops in 2005, ending a 29-year military presence. However, in July 2006, fighting resumed when Israeli forces attacked Lebanon following the kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers by Shia Muslim group Hezbollah. Around 1,000 Lebanese were killed and much of the country’s infrastructure destroyed.

    Lebanon’s diverse patchwork of Mediterranean-lapped coast, rugged alpine peaks and green, fertile valleys is packed into a parcel of land some 225km long and 46km wide. Once known as the ‘Paris of the East’, Beirut commands a magnificent position, thrust into the Mediterranean. Behind the city are towering mountains, visible when the traffic haze settles down. The Corniche seafront boasts beaches, restaurants, theaters and a dazzling variety of shops and restaurants. Beirut suffered greatly from Lebanon’s 16-year civil war, but following an impressive and ongoing process of reconstruction, the city was poised to become one of the most popular tourist and business destinations in the Middle East before the Israeli attacks of 2006. Beirut’s Central District, known as Solidere (the company in charge of the reconstruction program), has seen a spectacular number of modern buildings and office blocks springing up everywhere. After massive landfill, two new marinas, a new seaside promenade and a green park are also planned.

    The cities and ruins of Aanjar, Baalbeck, Byblos, Tyre and the Qadisha Valley/Cedars Forest are listed as UNESCO World Heritage sites and are also worth visiting.

    Lebanon now faces the massive task of rebuilding and maintaining a ceasefire. If this proves possible, the country could find itself back on the tourist radar.

    Geography
    Lebanon lies to the east of the Mediterranean, sharing borders to the north and east with the Syrian Arab Republic, and to the south with Israel/Palestinian Territory. It is a mountainous country and between the two mountain ranges of Jebel Lubnan (Mount Lebanon), Mount Hermon and the Anti-Lebanon range lies the fertile Bekaa Valley. Approximately half of the country lies at an altitude of over 900m (3000ft). Into this small country is packed such a variety of scenery that there are few places to equal it in beauty and choice. The famous cedar trees grow high in the mountains, while the lower slopes bear grapes, apricots, plums, peaches, figs, olives and barley, often on terraces painstakingly cut out from the mountainsides. On the coastal plain, citrus fruit, bananas and vegetables are cultivated, with radishes and beans grown in tiny patches.


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