Flats for rent with bathroom, living room and kitchen
The residence is made up of 8 flats. They can have one or two rooms which are double. In every flat the tenants share a bathroom, a living room and a kitchen which includes all the thing necessary to be used in a self catering accommodation.
Smoking is not allowed in the apartments.
Bed linen, towels, laundry
The tenants must bring their own bed linen and towels which can be also rented from the residence. The flats will be cleaned at least twice a week. There is also a small laundry where you can wash and dry your own clothes.
Separately expenses and deposit
Separately light and water expenses must be paid. The fee is shared among all the tenants staying in the same flat.
On arrival every tenant must pay 50€ per bed as a deposit in case of damages in the flat or failure to pay for light and water. This money will be given back when they leave the flat and once the conditions of the flat have been checked.
Internet
The residence also has Internet with no extra expenses at all.
Discount for students
Students will have a 15% discount on the fees stipulated for the rent of the flat, bed linen and laundry excluded, as long as they prove they are students by documents, for instance students card.
Prices
RENT FLAT 4 PEOPLE double room 48,30 € week per person
RENT FLAT 4 PEOPLE twin room 20,00 € per day
RENT FLAT 4 PEOPLE EXCLUSIVE USE 50,00 € per day
RENT FLAT 2 PEOPLE EXCLUSIVE USE 30,00 € per day
RENT OF BED LINEN AND TOWELS (WASHING INCLUDE) 13,00 € bed per week minimum one week
LAUNDRY SERVICE 2 € washing machine, 2 € tumble drier
Contact
Apartamentos Ibérica Española
Address: Ventura Rodríguez, 9
29009 Malaga, Spain
Tel/Fax: + 34 952 12 13 12 E-mail:
info@apartamentosaie.com
Please contact us for any question you have about Ibérica Española Apartments.
Form
Map Malaga City Centre
Apartamentos Ibérica Española is located 10 minutes walk from the historic center of Malaga.
Images
Pictures of the apartments for rent
Videos
FLAT 2 PEOPLE
FLAT 4 PEOPLE
Apartment Malaga Spain. Videos of apartment rentals in malaga. Apartments and room rentals, property to rent in malaga. These are self catering apartments. It is a cheap accommodation in Malaga, a budget accommodation with cheap apartments and shared rentals in Malaga Spain.
Malaga
Málaga is the second most populous city of the Autonomous Community of Andalusia, the sixth largest city in Spain with a population of 566,447 in 2008. It experiences the warmest winters of any European city with a population over 500,000, with a Mediterranean-Subtropical climate. It lies in southern Spain, on the Costa del Sol coast.
Clima
The climate is Mediterranean / Subtropical with mild winters and hot summers. Málaga enjoys plenty of sunshine throughout the year, with an average of about 300 sunshine days and only about 50 days with precipitation annually. It is located on the coastline, the winds blowing from the Mediterranean Sea makes the heat manageable during the summer.
Tourism
The city is a tourist destination, due mainly to its proximity to the Costa del Sol. Tourists also visit here to see the birthplace of Pablo Picasso. From Málaga, other cities like Seville, Córdoba, Granada, and Jaén can be reached by train, bus or car. A popular walk leads up the hill to the Gibralfaro castle (a Parador), offering views over the city. The castle is next to the Alcazaba, which in turn is next to the inner city of Málaga. A walk takes the Paseo del Parque (a promenade that runs alongside a park with many palm trees and statue) to the harbour, finishing in Calle Larios the main commercial street of the city.
Sights in Malaga
Gibralfaro Castle
Malaga Walls (Phoenician, Roman, Visigothic, Arab
and Spanish remains of the defensive compounds of the city)
Flavian Roman
Theater
Flavian Roman Amphitheatre (Underneath "Plaza de la Merced" Picasso's
birthplace), under the former cinemas "Victoria", "Astoria" and "Andalucia").
Alcazaba (Arabic fortress)
The cathedral, in the Græco-Roman style,
on the site of an ancient Moorish mosque, was begun in 1528 and completed
in 1719
Harbour, one of the most important in Spain.
The Picasso Foundation
- Native Home Museum of Picasso
Museo del Patrimonio Municipal de Málaga
Museo Picasso Málaga
CAC Málaga (museum of modern art)
Museo Interactivo
de la Música (MIMMA)
Museo Municipal (city museum).
Museo de Artes y
Tradiciones Populares (Museum of Arts and Popular Traditions)
Cathedral
of the Encarnation (neoclasical).
Palacio Episcopal (Bishop's Palace)
Iglesia del Sagrario (church)
Iglesia Parroquial de Santiago (St James's
church)
Palacio de los Condes de Buenavista
Plaza de Toros (bullring)
History
The Phoenicians from Tyre founded the city here circa 1000 BCE. The name Malaka is probably derived from the Phoenician word for "salt" because fish was salted near the harbour.
It was ruled by Visigoths (except Byzantine rule between 552-620) after Carthaginian and Roman rule. In the 8th century, duríng the Muslim Arabic rule over Spain, the city became an important centre of trade. Málaga was first a possession of the Caliphate of Córdoba. After the fall of the Umayyad dynasty, it became the capital of a distinct kingdom, dependent on Granada. During this time, the city was called Ma-laqah.
The traveller Ibn Battuta, who passed through around 1325, characterised it as "one of the largest and most beautiful towns of Andalusia the conveniences of both sea and land, and is abundantly supplied with foodstuffs and fruits". He praised its grapes, figs, and almonds; "its ruby-coloured Murcian pomegranates have no equal in the world." Another export good was "excellent gilded pottery". The town's mosque was large and beautiful, with "exceptionally tall orange trees" in its courtyard.
Málaga was one of the Iberian cities where Arab rule persisted the longest, having been part of the Emirate of Granada while most other part of the peninsula already succumbed to the reconquista, the medieval Christian Spanish struggled to drive the Muslim Arabs out. Málaga was conquered by Christian forces in 1487, five years before the fall of Granada.
On 24 August 1704 the indecisive Battle of Vélez-Málaga, largest naval battle in the War of the Spanish Succession, took place in the sea south of Málaga. Málaga underwent fierce bombing by Nationalist or Republican air forces and naval units during the Spanish Civil War in 1936.
The well-known
British journalist and writer Arthur Koestler was captured by the Nationalist
forces on their entry into Málaga, which formed the material for his book
Spanish Testament. Tourism on the adjacent Costa del Sol boosted the city's
economy from the 1960s onwards. The magnum opus of Cuban composer Ernesto
Lecuona, "Malagueña", is named for the music of the Gypsies of this region
of Spain.
from
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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