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Property: 1277   Two bedroom modern vacation apartment- Tel Aviv north

Description

Sample Image Vacation Rental 2 bedrooms Apartment
2 bedroom Vacation Apartment
1 bathrooms
Sleeps 4 guests
This property is also available for Home Exchange. Please contact owner for further details
Located in Gimel Hachadasha, near Ramat Aviv Gimel.
Beautiful modern 2 bedrooms apt.1 bedroom with a double bed & the other with 3 single sofa beds. on the first floor with an elevator.
24/7 doorman, 2 private parking places.
Next to a playground.15 min walk to the beach, 5 minutes from the commercial centre of Azoray Chen
Fully furnished: AC,TV, wireless Internet ,washer, dryer, towels& linens.
Fully equipped kitchen

Images

Vacation Rental 1277
Vacation Rental 1277 image 1 Vacation Rentals 1277 image 2
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Amenities

Equipment
Dryer Iron Iron board Linens Provided
Towels TV Washing Machine 
Facilities
Air condition Balcony Bath Gated Property
Lift Secured Parking Wireless Internet 
General
Children friendly Non smoking only Pets not allowed 
Kitchen
Fully equipped kitchen Microwave Refrigerator 

Rates

RateStarting date Ending dateNight Week endWeekCurrency
11 May 200821 Jun 2008100-700USD
22 Jun 200822 Jul 2008150-1000USD
23 Jul 200830 Aug 2008200-1400USD
31 Aug 200821 Oct 2008150-1000USD
Rate Information
An extra payment for electricity ( by the meter )
Deposit Requirments:  25%
Minimum Stay requirment:   1 week

Location

Region:Greater Tel Aviv
City:Tel Aviv
Area:Ramat Aviv
Location:Located in Gimel Hachadasha, near Ramat Aviv Gimel.
Next to a playground.15 min walk to the beach, 5 minutes from the commercial centre of Azoray Chen
Nearest Airport:Ben Gurion 25 km
City center:2 km

  Satellite View (An estimated location, for detailed location, please contact owner)

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Some Facts About Tel Aviv
Thousands of years of history come together in Jaffa, one of the world's oldest cities and the birthplace of Tel Aviv.
A center of tourism, food and fun, with an exotic Levantine ambience.
Driving to Jaffa is like going through a time tunnel- tunnel – skyscrapers soar on the left, while ahead lays a city with thousands of years behind it.
The main port of the ancient land of Israel, and one of the first ports in the world, Jaffa was a center of commerce and culture, agriculture and tourism, the destination of shipping lines from Alexandria and Beirut.
From the Clock Tower Square, convoys of wagons and camels fanned out to all parts of the land, and pilgrims made their way on foot to the holy city of Jerusalem.
The clock tower built by the Turkish Sultan Abd al-Hamid the II in 1906, when the land was under Ottoman rule, has recently undergone a facelift, as has the square surrounding it.
In the alley next to the Mahmuddiyah mosque, men are absorbed in endless games of backgammon, or shesh-besh, to use the local parlance.
Coffeehouses offering narghiles to smoke along with tiny cups of strong black Turkish coffee create an authentic Levantine atmosphere.
Twenty-two years before the founding of Tel Aviv, Jews left the walls of Jaffa and built in nearby Neve Tzedek.
These beautifully restored houses and streets preserve the romance of the early days of Jewish urban settlement.
A walking tour of Neve Tzedek is a must for romantics, history lovers and fans of small, winding alleys.
This is where the citys first cinema was built in 1914.
The Nahum Gutman Museum is located here in the home of the artist who immortalized the early days of Tel Aviv and Jaffa landscapes in his colorful paintings.
The neighborhood was nicknamed Little Paris because of its eye-opening architectural innovations.
Today, the most outstanding site is the Suzanne Dellal Centre, a bustling dance and theater complex.
How romantic to sit in the cafes and browse in the boutiques and designers shops, to see how a charming historic neighborhood survives surrounded by the skyscrapers of progress, enveloping a preserve of Jewish pioneering.
Just behind the flea market and Jerusalem Boulevard, in a sort of no-man’s land that links Florentin to Jaffa, lies the American Colony. This tiny, picturesque neighborhood of wooden homes with gabled roofs looks as though it was transported from a New England museum about life in the nineteenth century – which it was, in a way.
In 1866, a group of American Evangelical Christians from Jonesport, Maine docked in Jaffa, bringing with them the wood they used to build their homes in the holy land. They later sold the tiny colony to German Templars, which is why it is sometimes referred to as the German Colony. The story of the American Colony is told at the Maine Friendship House, which is open daily to visitors.
70 years after its establishment, Tel Aviv’s Port became the city's premier entertainment center, with dance clubs, cafes and restaurants at the water's edge and great shops featuring the work of Israeli designers.
The port attracts to its wide wooden promenade thousands of people seeking to combine food, shopping and entertainment with romantic red sunsets, salty sea breezes and white sails on the horizon.
If you get here after noontime on a Saturday, forget it – you'll quickly discover that you're not the only one in pursuit of this magical combination.
A bridge across the Yarkon River connects the port to the historic old Reading power station, whose cavernous interior now serves as an exciting venue for post-Modern design and art exhibitions.
Near the bridge is a foot and bicycle path called the Yarkon Promenade that heads east along the banks of the river into the Yarkon National Park – 875 acres of greenery, water, playing fields and leisure activities for the whole family.