zinna curtains

Choose your preferred language. We speak English (US) and 42 other languages. Most often used by people in the United States Lists are an easy way to save properties and plan trips with friends. Based on 50 reviews Good: 7 – 9 Okay: 5 – 7 Poor: 3 – 5 Very Poor: 1 – 3 Groups of friends (15) Good: 7 – 9 (21) Okay: 5 – 7 (5) Poor: 3 – 5 (3) Very Poor: 1 – 3 (1) Date (newer to older) Date (older to newer) Score (higher to lower) Score (lower to higher) Are you traveling for work? Most recent booking for this hotel was today at 05:16 » View more apartments in Sarandë Newest Reviews for Portafortuna Apartments 눉Bring toiletries and towels because they were not provided.눇The staff were very friendly and understandable regarding the late check in and everything. The view was very good. 눇Owner is very good for coustomers 눉There was nothing to complain about.눇The owners were very friendly and helped us out straight away whenever we needed something.

The appartment was very clean and modern and had perfect ocean views. Coffee and food in the restaurant downstairs was delicious. All in all the appartment was everything that we needed, we also had an 8 month old baby and the staff and facilities just made our stay comfortable and easy.
ikea tvingen shower curtain white/black 눉Aircon wasnt working well and the kitchen need little more accessories, like cutlery, plates, cups etc..
curtains randomer눇Great location, great view.
xhilaration blue ombre curtainsStaff spoke English and was very welcoming. 눉Everything was great, so i can just miss that holidays.눇The best place to be at Albania, fantastic location, beautifull views, just 3min. from the beach.

Great peaople working at that hotel, very helpful, funny and for sure they will try to do everything to make Your stay the best. Amaizing cheef, his meals were the best from all restaurants. I wish to come there with my family or frends next year. That was amaizing time! 눉Cleanest the worst.눇Great location, good food, good value of money. 눉not worth the money 눉if they can add a hair dryer,iron and more like cooking pan and plates and forks,knifes,spoons.Guest coming from all over the world they can`t carry all this equipments with them.눇Staff was very friendly and location.Thanks for your service great!! 눉Very clean, clean sheets and towels changed twice a week. The stuff was very polite always trying to be helpful in every way.눇Close to the beach Close to exchange officeRooms & Availability Chinnas Residency Free Wi-Fi in Rooms Free Parking 24-Hour Front Desk Express Check-In/Check-Out Non-smoking hotel No Pets Allowed The budget 2-star Chinnas Residency offers individual guestrooms.

It features ironing service, housekeeping and 24-hour reception as well as an elevator, a safe deposit box and free parking. Notable for its location in Gandhi nagar of Bangalore, the hotel provides access to JP Park, Vidhana Soudha and Jawahar Lal Nehru Planetarium within 20 minutes' walk. The hotel is set 450 meters away from Shree Mukti Naga Kshetra, Freedom Park and Kempegowda Bus Terminal. The hotel offers convenient location close to parks. This property counts 44 guestrooms featuring Double Room, Executive Room and Deluxe Room. Guests can reach Chinnas Residency by car from Bangalore International airport in 30 minutes. Such business facilities as a business corner and computers are available on site. Facilities General Free Parking Free Wi-Fi Express Check-In/Check-Out 24-Hour Front Desk Non-smoking hotel Safety Deposit Box Garden Fireplace Luggage Storage Elevator Television in lobby Multilingual Staff Credit Card Accepted No Pets Allowed Services Tours/ticket assistance Computer Rental Newspaper service Bellboy Self-service laundry Ironing Service Room Amenities Fan/extractor Free Wi-Fi in Rooms Cable/satellite television Blackout curtains Fireplace in room In-room desk Rollaway Beds Private Bathroom Hair dryer on request Room toiletries Premium bedding FacilitiesShow All Free

Parking Free Wi-Fi Express Check-In/Check-Out 24-Hour Front Desk Non-smoking hotel Safety Deposit Box Garden Fireplace Luggage Storage Elevator Important information Check-In:Check-Out:Children and extra bedsOne child under the age of 8 may stay free of charge when using existing bedding.Older children/adults may stay at the price of INR 200 per person per night in an extra bed. Facilities General Free Parking Free Wi-Fi Express Check-In/Check-Out 24-Hour Front Desk Non-smoking hotel Safety Deposit Box Garden Fireplace Luggage Storage Elevator Television in lobby Multilingual Staff Credit Card Accepted No Pets Allowed Services Tours/ticket assistance Computer Rental Newspaper service Bellboy Self-service laundry Ironing Service Room Amenities Fan/extractor Free Wi-Fi in Rooms Cable/satellite television Blackout curtains Fireplace in room In-room desk Rollaway Beds Private Bathroom Hair dryer on request Room toiletries Premium bedding Location Route Planner Enter your starting point (at least street address and city) to receive driving directions to the hotel.

Get Directions Local attractionsAirportsTrain stations Rooms & Availability This property counts 44 guestrooms featuring Double Room, Executive Room and Deluxe Room. Please, select dates to see available rooms. Gallery How to reach hotel 32 Seshasdri Road, Ananda Rao Circle, Gandhi Nagar, 560009 Bangalore, India, Bangalore, India Get directionsIn April 2016 a bust of Lenin was erected only a few meters from the border between Germany and Poland. During World War II, this sculpture had been stolen by the German army in the Soviet Union and sent to Küstrin-Kietz, in order to be destroyed and reused as a raw material for the arms industry. But two workers of the scrapping facility decided to hide it, saving it from the imminent smelting. The abandoned military area of Wittstock has turned into a ghost town. Entire apartment buildings, schools, office-blocks and hangars are falling apart. In front of the former cultural center we find an image, which is rich in contrasts: Lenin is standing there with his typical statesmanlike pose, but he is mutilated and completely covered with lichen.

It was not possible to get more information about this act of vandalism, but the view of this half-destroyed statue seems like an exemplary representation of the neglect of the East-German monumental landscape. In the year of 2015 a typical scene from the period immediately after the German reunification was seen again in the city of Strausberg: A Lenin-statue being lifted by a crane truck, in order to prepare its removal. The sculpture had been lying in the backyard of the Museum for Local History since 1991, covered by a black plastic. The German Communist Party had proposed its re-erection, but neither the mayor nor the director of the museum were convinced of the idea. Instead, they decided to give the statue to the cultural association “IFA-Freunde Trebus” (from the city of Fürstenwalde), in order to be exposed together with a collection of cars and everyday objects from the GDR. Between Luckenwalde and Jüterbog we find the nature reserve of Forst Zinna-Jüterbog-Kellberg, where one of the darkest pages in the history of the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany was written.

Back in the 19th century, the German army built a military training area, which was expanded by the Wehrmacht during World War II and taken over by the Red Army after the Nazi’s capitulation. This military area included a driving school for tanks. Hidden beyond a green curtain of trees and wild growing shrubberies, we can still find the abandoned complex of the former military hospital in Jüterbog. After the Soviets left it in 1993 after using it for 48 years, the buildings were emptied by German authorities and abandoned. Nowadays and after so many years of decay, the main building looks like a location for a horror movie: long corridors with peeled walls, collapsed ceilings, broken windows and two completely rotten operation rooms with a chair and a bed. In a small park in Strausberg there is still standing a stone slab with a relief reminding the Communist Revolution in 1917. It was unveiled in April of 1970 on the occasion of Lenins 100th birthday. Around the central figure of Lenin there is a group of attentive listeners, including some soldiers and seaman recruits.

Lenin is surrounded by exactly 12 persons, which could be seen as an allusion to Jesus’ apostles, particularly having in account that the honors to the Soviet hero often show parallel features to the worship of saints and concretely to the representation of Jesus Christ. In reality the image shows the historical meeting of the 10th October of 1917 (after the Gregorian calendar), which served as preparation for the revolution. Persecuted by the authorities, Lenin managed to return secretly to Petrograd and met 12 members of the Central Committee of the Bolshevik party, in order to plan the seizure of power. Though the style of Soviet Realism, which dominates amongst the public monuments with politic relevance in the entire Eastern Block, was not precisely known for its variety, it’s quite surprising, in how many different forms it was able to represent Lenin. For instance in the 3 meters statue of Eberswalde made of red granite, the role of strong statesman isn’t specially emphasized, being Lenin rather presented as a dreamy thinker: With one hand in the pocket and the other grabbing his coat collar, his glance gets lost in the distance.

He is wearing the Swedish fisherman cap, which he bought in 1917 in Stockholm, on his way back to Russia after many years of exile in Central Europe, and looks a little bit fatter than usual. If it wasn’t for the unmistakable facial features, one could think to be standing in front of the figure of a Scandinavian Fisherman, looking into the infinite ocean… Next to the national road B96 before entering Fürstenberg you can find two big relief walls, a free accessible remnant from the Soviet presence in Germany. It is an historical testimony to see, read and touch, that shows the glorious portrait of the Red Army as the big winner of World War II and also the ideal Communist projection for the post-war period. The monument is abandoned and falling apart, what in turn reflects the current dealing with the East-German past: Nobody wants to know anything about the Soviet heroism, not even about the liberation of Berlin from National Socialism accomplished by the Red Army in 1945. At least this memorial wasn’t demolished, so that even nowadays historians, strollers and curious persons still have the chance to get delighted by this relic.