Bright and modern apartment with balcony near the Central Station in Piazza Garibaldi in Naples.
Recently renovated, the apartment is on the second floor of a building with an elevator, preceded by a staircase. The entrance opens onto an atrium that leads to the living area, consisting of a living room with a double sofa bed, a TV, a dining table, and access to the balcony. In the same room, there is an open-plan kitchen with an induction stove, an oven and a kettle. The sleeping area has two bedrooms, one with a queen-sized bed, a desk, and a wardrobe, and one with a single bed and a fold-up bed and access to the balcony. A bathroom with a shower and hairdryer completes the layout.
Free Wi-Fi, air conditioning in all rooms, iron, and heat pump heating will be available to guests.
*Upon arrival or a few days before arrival it may be required to pay a tourist tax, which varies according to local regulations. You will find your reservation details within the Guest Area of Wonderful Italy.
We also offer our guests authentic experiences to live like a local. If interested, contact us and we will be more than happy to help you design an unforgettable holiday to discover Italian beauties.
"When you go to Naples you cry twice: when you arrive and when you leave," they say. Naples is a unique city, to be experienced by walking through the alleys, smelling the scent of gastronomic delicacies in the air, and admiring its rich artistic and monumental heritage.
Naples has a distinctive culinary tradition for its famous Neapolitan pizza, and the art of its pizza makers has been declared an intangible heritage of humanity by UNESCO.
Strolling through Spaccanapoli, the street that cuts the city in half, one traverses its thousand-year history thanks to the presence of ancient palaces and churches, such as the Duomo di Napoli and the Maschio Angioino. If there is one place that symbolizes Naples, it is Piazza del Plebiscito, now a symbol of the new 'Neapolitan Renaissance' where tourists come to admire its grandeur and two jewels: the neoclassical colonnade of the church of San Francesco di Paola and the Royal Palace. Today it is also possible to visit 'the underground city', or the so-called 'belly of Naples', which served the Neapolitans as a refuge during the bombing raids, where tourists can walk through the Greco-Roman aqueduct, the air-raid shelters, and finally visit the War Museum.
Particularly to be noticed is the San Severo Chapel, which houses the sculpture of the Veiled Christ, one of the most fascinating and mysterious works to be seen in Naples, the work of Giuseppe Sanmartino.
Naples Central Station is 200 m from the apartment, and Naples Airport is 4.5 km away by car.