🥨 In the heart of the Contades, less than 5 minutes walk from the Lycée Kleber and 10 minutes from the Palais de la Musique et des Congrès ( PMC) , you will stay in a quiet and green area, and discover the typical architecture of the Neustadt by walking up Rue Edouard Teutsch.
🏡 This magnificent duplex of 50m² is very bright and will be perfect for a tourist stay to discover Strasbourg or for work.
🛋️Au first level you will find a large living room with a fully equipped kitchen 🍽️ (fridge, hob, oven, Nespresso coffee machine, kettle, toaster) with a dining area. A sitting area with a sofa and television and a large storage area complete the space.
🛏️ Upstairs you will find your cocoon for the night with a bedroom featuring a double bed and a desk area.
🚿 🚽The flat has a bathroom with a shower, toilet and washing machine.
🪜The flat is on the 4th floor without a lift.
🅿️ The flat is located in a free parking zone from Ohmacht Boulevard to Lauth Street, as well as the streets north of this zone).
🅿️ A second zone, between 6 quai Zorn and Boulevard Jacques Preiss (300m walk from the flat) you have a free parking zone also exists.
🛍️ This family area has many local shops.
🏡The whole accommodation will be yours. Always in the spirit of satisfying you as much as possible during your stay :
🧹 the cleaning will be done,
🛏️ the bed will be made with clean sheets,
🧼 clean towels will be at your disposal as well as a bath mat and a tea towel per kitchen,
📶 free WIFI connection
👣 Your stay in a few figures:
⛪ 20 minutes walk from the Cathedral,
🌉 25 minutes walk from Petite France,
🌳 200m from Parc Contades,
🚃 300m from the Lycée Kléber tram station with the E line that takes you to the European Parliament,
🚌 200m from Bethesda bus station with line 2 which serves the train station.
🌃 In the heart of the Contades district, you will have the opportunity to discover the Neustadt on foot. Built to make Strasbourg a showcase for Prussian power, the Neustadt is characterised by its grandiose squares, its wide, airy tree-lined avenues and also by a happy alliance between the monumental and a keen sense of landscape. Today, it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. This astonishing post-Haussmann district shows some architectural extravagance, joyfully mixing Italian neo-Renaissance, neo-Gothic and Art Nouveau. Following the destruction of the Second World War, it remains one of the last remaining examples of late 19th century German architecture.