See The Sea in Tel Aviv
Send to a friend see 6 Tel Aviv vacation rentals and 15 Israel vacation rentalsTel Aviv, Israel Vacation Rentals Presents Listing #53295
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vacation rental description
- bedrooms 1
- pool no
- type Apartment
- baths 1
- hot tub yes
- community
- sleeps 2
- pets allowed no
-
rates (USD)
$60
-
$150
/ night
$300 - $800 / week
See the Sea, is located next to the Tel Aviv new port zone, which is known for its trendy and exciting bars, cafes and clubs. With its modern aesthetic, hip interiors, fashionable lounge See the Sea fits right into this happening neighborhood which is only a 2 minutes walk from Tel Aviv's most famous and amazing beaches and only five minutes away from its Business Center.
Inspired by sea view and the Beaches natural beauty, our local design focuses on the essential components creating a modern, yet warm atmosphere unencumbered by immense ornamentation – understated, yet buzzing with contemporary energy.
We can assure that a stay at See the Sea will always begin and end in comfort, luxury and style.
Visit Our www SeeTheSea co il Website Today for prices and avaiability
apartment rental amenities
designed rooms, complete with warm personal service, business facilities and a rooftop lounge. our 20 deluxe rooms and suits all come with cable television, direct-dial telephone, free wireless Internet, tea and coffee-making facilities, hairdryer, private kitchenette, refrigerator and a safe to meet every guests needs.
All rooms are equipped with:
Cable TV
Kitchenette
Direct dial
Telephone
Make-up mirror
Hairdryer
Double Glazed Windows
Refrigerator
Personal safe
Microwave
Individually
Controlled Air Conditioning
Complimentary
local newspaper (extra charge)
Daily housekeeping service (extra charge)
Tea and Coffee Making Facilities
Free Wireless and Broadband internet connection
activities and attractions in Tel Aviv Israel
Tel Aviv tends to surprise first-time visitors. They come expecting to find a provincial Middle Eastern city of plodding camels, ancient monuments, Oriental fantasies and armed combatants; instead, they discover a stylish, utterly contemporary Mediterranean metropolis filled with chic cafés, an exciting culture scene, fashionable boutiques, barely-clad beautiful people and a roaring nightlife.
For years, Tel Aviv was the jealously guarded secret of hip travelers – an alternative vacation destination that was edgier and more vibrant than the overpriced, touristy cities that dot the Mediterranean basin. Only very recently have international travel writers recognized the city’s many attributes - notably, of course, the clubs, restaurants and art galleries.
But the real source of Tel Aviv’s seductive powers is something less tangible. It is its overwhelming love of life. You see it in the uninhibited dancing on the bars; in the ever-crowded cafés, buzzing with laughter and conversation from morning until night; in the 24-hour holiday atmosphere during the long summer months; and in the furious creativity poured into the local theater, music and fashion scenes. There are very few cities that feel as strongly alive, self-confident and hedonistic – or that live so firmly in the present. And because Tel Aviv is relaxed, welcoming and homelike, the initial seduction usually evolves into a lifelong love affair.
Tel Aviv celebrates its 100th birthday this year. A famous photograph taken in 1909 shows a group of Zionist pioneers gathered on a beach near Jaffa, when it was still an outpost of the Ottoman Empire, dividing up a plot of land they named Ahuzat Bayit. Later, the fledgling settlement was renamed Tel Aviv, or Hill of Spring, after the Hebrew title of Altneuland, Theodore Herzl’s seminal tract on modern Zionism.
From 1909-1932, Tel Aviv was a sleepy little village that developed slowly, in fits and stops. The predominant architectural style was eclectic – a mixture of Levantine, Central European and Oriental influences – and the street planning somewhat haphazard. At the beginning of the 1920s, two major events occurred and determined the city’s future: Jaffa’s commercial center moved to Tel Aviv, following violent confrontations between the Jewish and Arab communities of that ancient port city; and Sir Patrick Geddes created a modern urban plan for Tel Aviv, based on the Garden City concept.
vacation rental rates
- Standard Rooms
- Mini-Suites