Athens Kolonaki Gemelli I
Your luxury journey starts here
1 bed/1 bathroom studio flat
The Gemelli I Apartment is a brand new studio flat in the Center of Athens at the posh area of Kolonaki. The interior design is modern with high quality furniture and the latest high end electrical devices.
The space
The apartment is very comfortable and bright semi-underground studio flat and it is fully renovated! The space can space can accomodate 2-4 people thanks to the sofa-bed, has access to a full size bathroom with shower and a fully equipped kitchen.
Guest access
The guests will have access to all the amenities of the house. There is a MasterLock box with keys to enter the property outside the building.
Information
- Guest 2-4
- 58 M2
- Semi-underground Floor
- Street view
- Queen Bed
- Keybox self check in
- High speed WIFI
- Air condition units
- LED Smart TV
- USB sockets
- Fridge / Freezer
- Nespresso maker
- Kettle
- Ceramic hobs / Oven
- Washer / Dryer
- Iron
- Hairdryer
- Shower gel / Shampoo
Things to do in Athens: Athens is home to two UNESCO World Heritage sites: the Acropolis and the medieval Daphni Monastery. The National Archaeological Museum contains artifacts dating to 6,000 B.C. The Epigraphic Museum Herodion theater, an ancient theater. Acropolis Museum is an archaeological museum built to house the artifacts found on the surrounding slopes from the Greek Bronze Age to Roman and Byzantine Greece. Acropolis Hill Plaka is the oldest district in Athens built near the Acropolis Monastiraki is a very old neighborhood in Athens known for its flea market. Thission is a lovely and historic neighborhood. Zappeion Hall in the National Gardens of Athens. Kifissia and Kolonaki are wealthy neighborhoods known for excellent restaurants and bars and upscale shopping.
Koukaki is also home to the National Museum of Contemporary Art (EMST). Once the Fix Brewery, the building that houses the museum has undergone a major transformation. Not yet fully operational, the EMST is destined to become a beacon of creative talent that will showcase the work of both Greek and foreign contemporary artists.
For jewelry aficionados, the Ilias Lalaounis Jewelry Museum is a must-see. Housing over 4,000 pieces of Lalaounis’ work, it pays homage to the ancient art of goldsmithing. Within a very short distance of the city’s most treasured accomplishments of antiquity, Koukaki provides the visitor to Athens with a window on modern life, a display of the promise that the present era holds for the city.
Perhaps the most charming area in the neighborhood is the pedestrian zone running from Koukaki Square along Georgaki Olympiou Street, which has a city-meets-jungle feel to it. Overhanging trees, including palms, entirely conceal the concrete facades of the buildings above the cafés and restaurants. Instead, fairy lights and glowing lanterns create an atmosphere akin to a Cuban Midsummer Night’s Dream, if that’s a vision you can imagine. Brightly painted wood and wicker chairs adorn the pavements where Athenians young and old come to socialize.
With an eclectic mix of cafés and quirky bars inspired by everything from Louisiana to Noah’s Ark, this street caters for every mood and style. At the bottom of Olympiou sits a veritable institution, Bel Ray, a one-time car wash turned retro café-bar, serving perfect croque-madames and tropical concoctions like the Calypso, a rum-based cocktail complete with dates, choco bitters and lime. With a minimalist yet cozy atmosphere and with thought-provoking street art as a backdrop, it is clear why this place has become so popular with young local trendsetters.
Yet in a fashion that Athens knows best, the new never quite supplants the old. Just around the corner, on a street lined with a mix of pre-war housing and modern apartments, lies the traditional Archontiko Café, brightly lit and simply furnished, where elderly gentlemen play backgammon, read the daily papers and play with their worry beads so loudly the noise echoes across the square.
Opposite, the sounds of 1940s jazz can be heard as couples learn their dance steps at the Jump & Jive Athens Swing Team Dance Studio. The whole scene is almost like a time capsule, transporting the wanderer back to a bygone Athens, quite removed from those establishments close by that are striving to push the capital into a new age.
Transportation
Kolonaki hosts two metro stations, Evangelismos and Megaro Mousikis but is also close to Omonoia and Panepistimio metro stations.
- Bus: 550, 608, 815, Ε14
- Train: Π2, Π3Β
- Subway: Evangelismos, Megaro Mousikis
- Trolleybus: 3
METRO and TRAM Network Map of Athens
Omonoia 1.2 km
Panathenaic Stadium 1.4 km
Plaka 1.4km
Monastiraki 1.3km
Syntagma 1km
Filopappou hill 2.3km
Temple of Olympian Zeus 1.6km
PURE Juice Bar : order your breakfast or healthy smootie
Coffee Lab: get a freshly brewed cup of coffee
Skoufaki Bar : grab an afternoon drink or a night cap
KORA Bakery don’t miss this!
Sklavenitis Supermarket 0.7 km
Grocery mini market 0.05km
Kolonaki: An Aristocratic Neighborhood
Kolonaki is an aristocratic neighborhood in central Athens situated at an exclusive location, encompassed by Syntagma Square, Vasilissis Sofias Avenue and the southwestern slopes of Lycabettus Hill. It was named after the ancient old column (the Greek for small column is kolonaki), found in the center of Kolonaki Square.
Kolonaki is a wealthy, chic and upmarket district, and a fashionable meeting area. Here, one may encounter green spots and attractive buildings, predominantly neoclassical and modernist, lending the area a distinguished character. As one of the capital’s leading shopping areas, it includes a number of high-end boutiques from young adult to casual fashion to prestigious haute-couture from Greek and international designers. Here one will find some of the most expensive commercial shops, popular cafes and modern bars, as well as some luxury restaurants.
From the National Gardens if you cross Vassilias Sophias street and continue up the hill from Irodou Atikou past the beautiful mansion that houses the Benaki Museum , you will be in Kolonaki Square, one of the most famous and enjoyable places to sip coffee, watch people and eat in the cafes that line the street and remind many people of Paris. The neighborhood is full of cafes and expensive shops, fancy restaurants and fancy people and shopping in this area is like shopping in the finest areas of New York or Paris. In the winter giant heaters are placed outside and during the summer they have some kind of hook-up that blows cold air through some tubes into the covered area on the street. During the Greek Civil War Kolonaki and Syntagma were the only parts of Athens not under the control of the communists.
Walk past the cafes and turn left up Anagnastopoulou Street at the top of the square and go right on Iraklitou, then up the steps and through the small park. If you have kids you can leave them in the playground while you take a seat at the Ouzerie in Platia Dexameni. This is one of the best spots in Athens, high enough to be breezy and cool, with excellent food. Very nice place to go for lunch, dinner or coffee.
Dexameni means cistern which is what the square sits upon. It used to be the water supply for all of Athens and was actually built by the Emperor Hadrian and the ancient walls are still there. On Friday there is an organic market here from 9am to 1pm. There is also an outdoor movie theater that shows mostly English language films.
Kolonaki is named for the small column which sits in a corner of Kolonaki Square, which is actually called Platia Filikis Eterias, though few people call it that. It is one of the most under utilized squares in Athens since most people prefer to hang out in the cafes, which have so much sidewalk space that they don’t need to expand across the street and into the square. But they spent a lot of money to remodel it and make it more people friendly. It is also one of the few places in Athens where you will find Astroturf. The Zoumboulakis Gallery at Alopekis 20 at the bottom of the square is a contemporary art gallery which features works by Greek and foreign artists and exhibits which change once a month or so. It is one of the oldest galleries in Athens, originating as an antique shop in 1912.
The Benaki Museum and the Goulandris Museum of Cycladic Art are two of the best private collections in Greece and both are located in Kolonaki. The Museum of the History of Greek Costume and the Theater Museum are also in the neighborhood and all you have to do is cross Vasilissis Sofias Avenue to visit the Byzantine Museum, and the War Museum of Athens. The National Gallery is just a few blocks further though it is pretty much a construction site. Also while in the area have a look at the newly discovered Lyceum of Aristotle.
Eleftherios Venizelos Airport 27,5 km
Private transfers: We recommend using an online pre-booked Athens transfer service, which provides transfer by private VIP car or minibus and arranging a pickup directly from the apartment to the airport or port . Alternatively, you can book a taxi online using BEAT or UBER.
Acropolis 2.1km
Plaka 1.4km
Monastiraki 1.5km
Panathenaic Stadium 1.4 km
Syntagma 1km
Temple of Olympian Zeus 1.4km
Omonoia 1.2 km
National Garden – 1.2 km
National Observatry of Athens 2.4 km
Roman Agora 1.5km
Peiraeus Port 11km
Athens Music Hall 2 km
Lycabettus Theater 0.65 km
Ermou Street-Shopping Area 1.5 km
Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center 6.8 km