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Tryp Atocha - Madrid, Spain

Atocha, 83
Madrid, 28012
Nightly Rates (154.15 - 316.20)   4 Star
Tryp Atocha

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
The Tryp Atocha Hotel, inaugurated in 2002, is located in an important building of 1913, in the heart of Madrid, in the so-called "Arts triangle", composed of the Prado, Thyssen and Reina Sofia museums. The Royal Palace, the House of Commons, the most representative streets and squares of the city, such as Paseo de la Catellana, Puerta del Sol, Gran Via, Plaza de Cibeles, are all a 10 minute walk away.

Tryp Atocha


Amenities
  • AM/FM Alarm Clock

  • Babysitting/Child Services

  • Bar/Lounge

  • 24 Hour Front Desk

  • Handicapped Rooms/Facilities

  • Hairdryers Available

  • Mini Bar

  • Meeting/Banquet Facilities

  • No Smoking Rooms/Facilities

  • Restaurant

  • Room Service

  • Safe Deposit Box

  • Television with Cable

  • Television with Cable

  • Laundry/Valet Services

  • Disco

  • Casino

  • Live Entertainment

  • Boutiques

  • Indoor Parking

  • Parking

  • Doctor on Call

  • Exercise Gym

  • Business Center

  • Modem Lines in Room


  • Room Information
    Tryp Atocha
  • STANDARD room

  • STANDARD room type consists of one or more rooms of the following type: * SUPERIOR ROOM * SINGLE ROOM * STANDARD ROOM * STANDARD DOUBLE PLUS EXTRA BED * STANDARD ROOM. 2 PEOPLE.
  • DELUXE room

  • DELUXE room type consists of one or more rooms of the following type: * PREMIUM ROOM. 1 PERSON * PREMIUM ROOM, 2 PEOPLE * SUPERIOR ROOM. 2 PEOPLE. * SUPERIOR ROOM. 1 PERSON.
  • OTHER room

  • OTHER room type consists of one or more rooms of the following type: * SINGLE ROOM

    Rate Disclaimer
    Rates may vary due to availability and season. For reservations, rooms description and prices click on CHECK AVAILABILTY.

    Miscellaneous Information
  • Euro is the native currency. 

  • Check in time is Noon 

  • Check out time is Noon 

  • Opened in  2002 

  • 150  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 6  floors. 


  • Directions
    City centre: Calle Atocha, 83. Arriving by metro, the closest station is Anton Martin (line 1). By taxi: a ride from the airport to the Hotel is approximately 20 minutes long. Located right in the city centre of Madrid, in an important 18th century building, renovated and equipped with the most modern comforts, it is very close to Plaza Mayor, to the Prado and Reina Sofia museums and to the Atocha-AVE train station.

    Guarantee Policy
    **/** Welcome to SOL MELIA HOTELS & RESORTS **/**

    Cancellation Policy
    24h prior no penalty or 1 night will be charged

    Meeting Facility
  • GRAN SALON ATOCHA
  •   It is the main meeting room of the Hotel, with a classic style, impressing big windows and a10 metres high panelled ceiling. It is perfect for organizing cocktails, conventions and banquets. Maximum capacity: 300 people.

  • SALON MORATIN
  •   Classic and wide meeting room, 6 metres high, perfect for conventions, meetings and banquets. It is fully equipped with all the necessary audiovisual aids and it can host up to 230 people.

  • SALON SANTA ANA
  •   Its structure makes it the perfect place for hosting any kind of event. It is spacious, 4 metres high, and is equipped with the latest audiovisual aids. Maximum capacity: 100 people.

  • SALON LA PETITE
  •   Room with natural light perfect for meetings with upo to 20 people, with internet connection and all the necessary audiovisual aids.

  • SALON LE PETIT
  •   Room with natural light perfect for meetings with upo to 20 people, with internet connection and all the necessary audiovisual aids.

  • SALON CELESTE
  •   Bright room, 4 metres high, perfect for any kind of event. Maximum capacity: 180 people.

  • AUDIOVISUALES
  •   The Tryp Atocha is equipped with all the audiovisual aids clients may require for their meetings. PC projectors, OHP, sound system (table, wireless and tie-clip microphones), flip-charts, screens, simultaneous interpreting facilities, videotape recorders, DVD.


  • Museo del Prado

  • Perhaps the most beautiful neoclassic building of all Madrid. Built in 1785, it was intended to be a museum of natural history. Having been used as an arsenal during the wars against Napoleon, it became Madrid's Museum of art in 1819. Certainly it hosts one of the most important collections of paintings worldwide, with special rooms for masters like Goya, Velazquez, El Greco, Zurbaran, Murillo and Tiziano, as well as for representants of the Dutch school.
  • Museo Nacional Reina Sofia

  • This modern building, featuring interesting expositions since 1993, completes the "Arts Triangle" of the Prado museum.
  • Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza

  • This museum, inaugurated in 1993, hosts one of the most important private art collections.
  • Madrid de los Austrias

  • "Madrid de los Austrias" is the name of a zone of Madrid referring the Habsburgo Age. Here you can find renacentist and barroque constructions as the Puerta del Sol, Plaza de las Descalzas Reales, Convento de la Encarnacion, the area of Las Cavas, Plaza Mayor and Plaza de la Villa, where buildings date back to different centuries.

    Related Spain Content

    The straw donkey and sombrero image of Spain is now largely consigned to the bin - along with the paella and chips. In its place comes a sheaf of sparkling and evocative new images, as the visitor trend turns from sun-and-fun package holidays to individually tailored, more sophisticated themes.

    Spain is a country on the move, a place of rapid change. High-speed railways have conquered the country’s mountainous terrain and many cities now have modern metro and tram networks, testifying to a vibrant and growing economy. But here, too, you will find a country where
    time stands still, where Roman columns rise into a clear blue sky, where crumbling Arab watchtowers maintain a lonely vigil over vast and magnificent landscapes, and city plazas where the baroque jostles with the modern to strike a uniquely Spanish harmony.

    The historic cities of Spain are drenched in the atmosphere of the past, but well equipped to meet modern needs as well. The countryside is infinitely varied, from the ‘Green Spain’ of the rugged Atlantic coast to the parched plains of Castile and La Mancha. The open roads across endless open spaces produce a steady stream of surprises, with hidden villages and unexpected castles, shepherds roaming with their flocks and hilltop windmills appearing unexpectedly. It is a great country for touring.      

    Rich in history and natural beauty and with more than a fair share of sunshine Spain is a year-round, natural choice for many different kinds of holiday, from outdoor adventures to world-class museums and art galleries to an infinite variety of popular beaches and secluded coves. Not least the people are warm and welcoming - and they know how to party. The Spanish experience would be incomplete without joining in at least one of its famous fiestas.

    Geography
    Spain shares the Iberian Peninsula with its smaller neighbor, Portugal, and is bordered to the northeast by the Pyrenees Mountains, which separate Spain from France. The Balearic Islands (Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza and Formentera), 193km (120 miles) southeast of Barcelona, and the Canary Islands off the west coast of Africa are part of Spain, as are the tiny enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla on the North African mainland.

    Mainland Spain is the second highest and most mountainous country in Europe, with an average height of 610m (2,000ft). The Pyrenees stretch roughly 400km (249 miles) from the Basque Country’s Atlantic coast, eastwards to the Mediterranean Sea. In places the peaks rise to over 1,524m (5,000ft), the highest point being 3,404m (11,169ft). The main physical feature of Spain is the vast central plateau, or Meseta, divided by several chains of sierras. The higher northern area includes Castile and León, the southern section comprises Castile/La Mancha and Extremadura. In the south, the high plains rise further at the Sierra Morena before falling abruptly at the great valley of The Guadalquivir.

    Southeast of Granada is the Sierra Nevada, part of the Betic Cordillera, which runs parallel to the Mediterranean, rising to 3,478m (11,411ft) at the summit of Mulhacen, the highest point on the Spanish peninsula (the Pico del Teide on Tenerife in the Canaries is the highest peak in Spain at 3,718m (12,198ft). The Mediterranean coast extends 1,660km (1,030 miles) from the French frontier to the Straits of Gibraltar, the narrow strip of water linking the Mediterranean with the Atlantic and separating Spain from North Africa.


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