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Hotel Moncloa * * * *

Serano Jover, 1

28015 - Madrid - Madrid - Spain

Hotel Moncloa

Activities at Hotel Moncloa or nearby

  • Accommodations:

    • 146 rooms & 2 suites

    • High-Speed Internet access

    • Minibar

  • Dining options:

    • Restaurant (Mediterranean cuisine)

    • Global Café (Tapas)

    • Lobby Bar

    • Bar-Garden Terraza

  • Meeting facilities:

    • 14 meeting rooms

  • Sports/Relaxation facilities and services:

    • Fitness Center

  • Other facilities or services:

    • Business Center

    • Private Parking

ABOUT MADRID

Madrid is on a roll. Never a city to let the grass grow under its feet, the Spanish capital is experiencing unprecedented change thanks to the efforts of the visionary mayor Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón -- a man compared by some, however tongue in cheek, to a pharaoh. In 2005 the mayor launched a new 7-year city program aimed at transforming the capital into a world-class cosmopolitan center, with improved Metro and rail transport and the expansion of new barrios, or districts, especially in the north of the city where a tren ligero (a smaller, streamlined Talgo-shaped tram similar to those successfully operating in Bilbao) is scheduled to be in operation by spring 2007. Though the completion of all this work was originally timed to coincide with Madrid's expected nomination as venue for the 2012 Olympics, the city's disbelief at being beaten for the honor by London was quickly forgotten (maudlin introspection is not part of the feisty Madrileño temperament). In fact, many completion schedules have been brought forward to coincide with the municipal elections of May 2007.

Two new terminals at Barajas airport were inaugurated in February 2006, more than doubling the city's international traffic and making the airport the third busiest in Europe, while Chamartín railway station is being totally rebuilt to merge with a renovated Metro station and a new underground regional and long-distance bus terminal. Each of the four skyscrapers currently under construction (Torres Repsol, Espacio, Sacyr, and Cristal) will outstrip Torre Picasso in the AZCA Business Center as the highest building in town; at the same time, pedestrian and subway underpasses are being tunneled and countless streets and avenues widened, all aimed at improving road access. The roadwork may prove a bone of contention for frustrated and quietly -- or not so quietly -- seething Madrileño drivers who see their priority of getting to work on time thwarted by cranes, bulldozers, excavations, and scaffoldings until the job gets done. On the other hand, public transportation is being upgraded almost by the month, particularly on the much-used and excellent-value Metro.

The cultural mix of the 5-million-plus population is also changing radically, with an influx of immigrants from South American and Eastern European countries taking over many of the service and blue-collar jobs. Many are Ecuadorians, who are busy opening cafes, shops -- especially bakeries -- and locutorios (long-distance phone-call centers). Meanwhile the Russians, Romanians, Poles, and Czechs who work on many of the building sites and in practical fields such as plumbing and carpentry have shown great versatility both in their work and in picking up Spanish. It's all a great change from the homogeneous Madrid of a few years back when foreign residents totaled barely 1%.

Ecological changes abound, too. Madrid is now officially one of the "greenest" cities in Europe, with verdant areas springing up every year thanks to an ecologically aware town hall. The Retiro, with its flowers, fountains, and boat-filled lake, and the huge Casa del Campo moorland, with its copses and bird life, are the city's twin lungs, aided by the regular flow of pure mountain air from the Guadarramas 97km (60 miles) away. Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón's improvement plans also cover the planting of hundreds of thousands of trees in newly created green zones -- intersected by walking and cycling lanes -- both in and around the city. His Manzanares River development is particularly ambitious, with both river and M-30 highway running underground while the surface becomes a pedestrianized parkland that connects with the Casa del Campo. (In summer 2006 the crusading mayor also launched a battle against "light pollution" by announcing a future ban on practically all neon lights in the city center, so that Madrileños would be able to see the stars on cloudless nights.)

In a sense, the Spanish capital hasn't changed at all: It has always been an awesome blend of tradition and dynamism. At its heart is the vintage Madrid of Los Austrias, the Plaza Mayor, and the Palacio Real, still exuding centuries-old atmosphere and ringed in turn by regenerated castizo (traditional) districts like Chueca, Malasaña, and Lavapiés (the latter's population epitomizing the new ethnically varied Madrid). The San Isidro and Virgen de la Almudena fiestas are celebrated with their customary color and vigor. Shopping, dining, and cultural options are plentiful and remarkably varied. And the spontaneous nonstop lifestyle continues to thrive, with bars (more than 18,000 of them) opening from 5:30am onwards for coffee and churros and closing late (or never shutting at all if you include the after-hours bars), and weekend dawn traffic jams of cars and night buses blocking the city thoroughfares as revelers weave their way to, from, or between their favorite spots.

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