Featuring 3-star accommodation, Old Town Mtatsminda is located in Tbilisi City, 1.2 km from Freedom Square and 600 m from Tbilisi Opera and Ballet Theatre. With a shared lounge, the 3-star hotel has air-conditioned rooms with free WiFi. The property is set in the Mtatsminda district, 800 from Rustaveli Theatre.
The units in the hotel are equipped with a flat-screen TV. Rooms are complete with a private bathroom fitted with a bath, while some units at Old Town Mtatsminda also feature a balcony. All rooms feature a desk.
Guests at the accommodation can enjoy a continental or a buffet breakfast.
Staff are always available to help at the reception.
Mtatsminda has become a symbol of Tbilisi's architectural and natural landscape. It dominates the city silhouette and can be admired from almost all other districts of Tbilisi. In the 19th century, the development of Rustaveli Avenue lent impetus to the urban growth on the slopes of Mtatsminda. The parallel streets of Rustaveli avenue were relatively wide and well-equipped, consequently they became preferred residence for the bourgeoisie; while the upper streets, on the slopes of Mtatsminda, were mostly narrow alleys, made up of smaller, two-story houses, in which craftsmen and workers lived. The development of Mtatsminda neighbourhood was further facilitated by the construction of the funicular, which connected the central districts of the city to the upper plateau of Mtatsminda. The funicular was built in 1903-1905. The building of the upper station of the funicular was constructed in 1938 and ever since it has become a landmark of the capital. There is a restaurant and bar inside the arched building. The main element of this building is a terrace, covered with an openwork ceiling and arches carried on high columns, and it is visible from many parts of the city. In 1929, pantheon of Georgian writers and public figures was opened on the terrace around Mamadaviti Church. In the 1930s, a 34-hectare Mtatsminda park was laid out, later its area was increased to 100 hectares. In 1956, the first television tower in Georgia was erected on the upper plateau of Mtatsminda, which was replaced by a new one in the 1970s.
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