Sahinbey Hotel, Ankara, Turkey - Best Prices
Get Cheapest Prices Ever Sahinbey Hotel
Only 450 metres to the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, Sahinbey Hotel offers a terrace with city views and air-conditioned rooms that offer free Wi-Fi, a satellite TV and private bathroom. Each room at Hotel Sahinbey comes with a private...
Latitude 39.9400083700237, Longitude ' 32.8609925508499, Continent Europe, County Turkey, City Ankara, Address Necati Bey Mah. Hisarpark Caddesi Alatas Sokak No:5 Ulus
Gaziantep Introduction Film
Gaziantep
Area: 7.642 km²
Population: 1.285.249 (2000)
Trafic Code: 27
The province of Gaziantep is one of the oldest culture centers of Southeastern Anatolian region. The history of the city extends to 4000 B.C years and most of the civilizations were founded on the surrounding lands. The city is located between Mesopotamia and Mediterranean and is at the intersection point of the roads connecting east to south and north to west and is also located on the historic Silk Road. The province of Gaziantep hosts findings, creations and structures of Paleolithic, Neolithic and Calceolithic Ages, Bronze Age, Hittite, Median, Asurian, Persian, Alexander the Great, Selefkos, Roman, Byzantine, Abbasi and Seljuk civilizations periods. Beside its cultural riches, Gaziantep is a tourism paradise with its natural beauties, geography, rich variety of food and shopping possibilities.
Districts: Gaziantep (center), Araban, İslahiye, Karkamış, Nizip, Oğuzeli, Nurdağı, Şahinbey, Şehitkamil, Yavuzeli.
Miniatürk (Miniature Turkey Park) in Beyoğlu, Istanbul
Miniatürk (Miniature Turkey Park) in Beyoğlu, Istanbul | Top Attractions Istanbul
Miniaturk was inaugurated on 02 May 2003. It is a collection of models of architectural works from the rich heritage of many civilizations that prevailed and left traces in Turkey from Ancient Greece to Rome and the Byzantine Empire, from the Seljuks to the Ottomans.
In line with its motto “A small model of a great country”, Miniaturk has become a display window for Turkey. It contains models at a scale of 1/25 of 134 architectural works selected from among thousands of historical buildings by the criteria of reputation, capacity to represent its era and the feasibility of the making of its model.
Miniaturk, located by the Golden Horn, is not limited to modern Turkey or to the Turkish culture, but brings together traces of a co-existence of several civilizations in the whole old Ottoman realm with all the values that has made Anatolia what it is today. It is the symbol of civilizations dating as far back as 3000 thousand years ago where peace, tolerance and justice prevailed.
A team, supported by expert advisors, chose, by a painstaking selection procedure, the caravanserais, mosque complexes, madrasahs, bridges, railway stations, castles, defense walls, mausoleums, mosques, churches, synagogues, palaces, mansions, obelisks, monuments, statutes as well as unique natural formations such as Pamukkale’s white cascades and Cappadocia’s fairy chimneys to be exhibited in Miniaturk.
Everything is so faithful to its original in Miniaturk that one feels as if he had traveled across the whole country from the east to the west, from the north to the east in a very short span of time. An audio guiding system that accompanies each model is unique to Miniaturk. The systems provide information in nine languages: Turkish, English, French, German, Russian, Arabic, Spanish, Farsi and Japanese.
Its total area is 60.000 sqm. In addition to the 15.000-sqm-area where miniatures are located, a restaurant, a café, a shopping mall, an open-air show ground and a children’s playground make Miniaturk a giant complex where everything is available to make visitors have a good time while learning things. Also there is a car park and this car park capacity 180 cars. As well as Miniatürk included two small museum which are The Panorama Victory Museum and The Istanbul Crystals Museum.
The first address in Istanbul tours for both local and foreign tourists, Miniaturk is ideal for those who want to make a wonderful trip round Turkey in a short span of time. Miniaturk is a display window for Turkey!
E-Mail: info@miniaturk.com.tr
Visiting Hours
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The Museum is open between 09:00 and 19:00 every day.
Price
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Entrance fee for foreign nationals: 15.00 TL
Term of payment: Cash TL currency accepted. No foreign currency accepted.
Website:
Cheap and Best Budget Hotels in Ankara , Turkey
Cheap and Best Budget Hotels in Ankara. Must Watch...
This list is perfect for you, if you are in Ankara and looking for a budget stay.
Feel free to ask your questions in comment box regarding Ankara travel and Hotels.
Listed Hotels
King Hotel
Apart Hotel Best
Ankara Plaza Hotel
No 19 Boutique Hotel
Best Western Hotel Ikibin-2000
First Apart Hotel
Ankara Koza Suite Hotel
Ab-i Hayat Thermal Hotel
Golden Boutique Hotel
Koru Hotel
It's not the Ranking of Best Budget Hotels in Ankara, it's just the list of some of Cheap and Best Hotels.
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Istanbul New Airport's incredible design!
Istanbul New Airport (Turkish: İstanbul Yeni Havaalanı), or Third Airport (Turkish: Üçüncü Havaalanı), is an international airport under construction in Arnavutköy district on the European side of Istanbul, Turkey.
The airport is planned as the largest airport in the world, with a 150 million passenger annual capacity in its last expansion stage, and was planned due to lack of capacity in the existing airports of Istanbul. It will be the third international airport to be built in Istanbul after Istanbul Atatürk Airport and Sabiha Gökçen International Airport. Atatürk Airport will be closed down once the new airport is operational.
As of December 2017, around 73% of the construction of the airport was completed. The inauguration of the airport is planned to take place on 29 October 2018 with preliminary operations to commence already by February 2018.
This film is made by IGA - Istanbul Grand Airport
KMB STUDIOS I DECEMBER 2017
Tugcan Hotel, Gaziantep, Turkey
Book your next Holiday here. Best prices guaranted.
Urfa, Adiyaman, Kahta, and Nemrut... What a day Jaredwall's photos around Kahta, Turkey
Preview of Jaredwall's blog at TravelPod. Read the full blog here:
This blog preview was made by TravelPod using the TripAdvisor™ TripWow slideshow creator.
Entry from: Kahta, Turkey
Entry Title: Urfa, Adiyaman, Kahta, and Nemrut... What a day!
Entry:
Tuesday, May 15, Gaziantep to Urfa: Today was the most frustrating day. I got up early and went to the Gaziantep Otogar, where I caught a 3 hour ride to Urfa. I had extensively searched Internet websites for information on tours to Mount Nemrut, one of the most famous mountains in Turkey, from Urfa. Everything I knew pointed to Yes. But really, this was not an option, as I was to find out. I got to Urfa and spotted Metro Turizm, a familiar name in a sea of unfamiliarity. I learned where to catch a bus to Balikli Gol (which means the Lake of Fishes), Urfa's main tourist attraction and pilgrimmage site. Usually the good hotels and travel agencies ring around the most popular tourist sites of a city. I was wrong. Urfa only had one travel agency that I could find. I located it after walking a half hour uphill in the burning sun toting my big bag. I found the Hotel Ipek, which I knew from the Internet as an upscale establishment, and asked about tours. We run tours to Nemrut every Sunday, said the gal at the desk with a smile. You can go and arrange it with our tour manager. 'Yeah, right, I'll just wait here 'till Sunday,' I thought bitterly. I took off back to the Otogar, still hoping to find a tour agency. I went to Metro and they sent me around the corner to the local mini-bus stop. Mini-buses run from Urfa to Adiyaman every hour, and thereafter to Kahta. The cost for a trip is 7.50-10 lira and is about 100 kilometers from Urfa to Adiyaman , which can take 2 hours as the bus picks up and drops off numerous passengers along the way. The little man at the mini-bus stand called up a friend and gave me the phone. We talked and agreed on a 70 lira stay and tour. After the ride to Adiyaman I was put on another mini-bus bound toward Kahta, which is 30 kilometers from Adiyaman and is the main springboard town to Mount Nemrut. On the way I talked to a nice old Kurdish man who I couldn't convince that I wasn't from Germany. Where are you from? he would ask me. Canada, I would say. Alimanya? he asks (which is the Turkish word for Germany), and I say, No, Canada. Italya? No, C... Alimanya. Slovakia. Austria. Albania... He was listing more than asking, now. No, no, K-A-N-A-D-A. Canada. Sprekin ze Deutsch? The tour bus dropped me at a small tourist office of Kommagenetour, and I must explicitly state right now, I do NOT recommend this tour agency, not it's tours nor it's accomodations. The operators charge twice the price of many other tour agencies, and for a tour that they boast shows you more than Nemrut (by more they mean an old bridge and a statue). I was told that 140 YTL got me a hotel, a tour, and I didn't have to pay any entrace fees, of which there were two at 10 YTL each. But I just talked to another man who quoted me 70 YTL, with breakfast included, I said. Yes, but with me you can go tonight and see the sunset. The weather is beautiful today. It was bad yesterday. Who knows what it will be tomorrow? And, my friend, listen. This man... may I see his card please?... this man will make you pay the entrance fees, which are 10 lira at the bridge and 10 lira at Nemrut Dagi. And you won't get to see this bridge, he said with a smile. Since I was on a very tight schedule, I agreed to a 125 lira deal, which hurt me deeply since it was more than a third of my entire budget. It hurt me even more deeply after I saw how dirty and poor the room was. On the up side, my driver magically showed up right as the money brushed the guy's palm, and off we went to catch the sunset on Mount Nemrut. Now usually for 140 lira or so, which is an extraordinary amount for a tour in Turkey, you get a guide who speaks your own language and knows the history of the area. Not so with Mehmet, a Kurdish guy with a lot of energy and a lead foot. Cabuk cabuk! he would hollar as we flew past the first few sights that I was apparently paying extra to see. Quick quick! The sun sets in 2 hours. You came late. It's better to come early and go slow.
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Photos from this trip:
1. Cendere Bridge
2. Cheers at Sunset
3. Kurdish Goatherds
4. Seated Kings
5. Snow on Nemrut
6. Sunset on Nemrut
7. Sunset on the Mount
8. The Best Head on the Mountain
9. The Heads
10. The Landscape
11. The Lion
12. The Old Bird
13. To Nemrut Summit
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