The Room
The Sky Suite is located on the top floor of the structure and is the only room to have a terrace equipped between the roofs of Rome with a curtain with electronic closure a few steps from the main attractions of the city.
It is ideal for a couple who likes the comfort of the spacious interior spaces but also for a family with two children thanks to the comfortable foldaway double bed. The Terrace can be reached via a staircase cleverly inserted in the context of the room.
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The benefits when you book from our website:
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- English
- Italian
- Russian
- Spanish
Good to know:
- Guests must present a proof of identity upon check-in.
- Even if rooms are not always available before 2:00PM, guests can leave their luggage at the reception until check-in.
- City taxes for the city of Rome (€ 3.50 per person per night) are not included in the cost of the room listed on this website, and must be paid at check-in.
- Guests are kindly requested to provide all the arrival details, such as flight number and arrival time at the airport if by plane, arrival time at the station if by train, etc. Please provide these details at least 48 hours before arrival.




How to reach us
- Take the Leonardo express to Roma Termini station with departures every 15-30 minutes (depending on the day and/or time). Time: 32 minutes (2 stops).
- From the front entrance of Termini station head towards Via Giovanni Giolitti and find the Termini (MA-MB-FS) bus stop of bus number 70 (Clodio). Time: 2 minutes (50 meters).
- Take bus number 70 (Clodio) for 10 stops.
- Get off at the Senato stop. Time: 15 minutes (10 stops).
- Proceed on foot towards Via della Vetrina, 5. Time: 3 minutes (200 meters).
- Proceed to the Ciampino train station and take the metro to Termini station. Time: 15 minutes.
- From the front entrance of Termini station head towards Via Giovanni Giolitti and find the Termini (MA-MB-FS) bus stop of bus number 70 (Clodio). Time: 2 minutes (50 meters).
- Take bus number 70 (Clodio) for 10 stops.
- Get off at the Senato stop. Time: 15 minutes (10 stops).
- Proceed on foot towards Via della Vetrina, 5. Time: 3 minutes (200 meters).
- From the front entrance of Termini station head towards Via Giovanni Giolitti and find the Termini (MA-MB-FS) bus stop of bus number 70 (Clodio). Time: 2 minutes (50 meters).
- Take bus number 70 (Clodio) for 10 stops.
- Get off at the Senato stop. Time: 15 minutes (10 stops).
- Proceed on foot towards Via della Vetrina, 5. Time: 3 minutes (200 meters).
- From Tiburtina station proceed to Line B Laurentina and get off at the Termini stop. Time: 6 minutes (4 stops).
- From the front entrance of Termini station head towards Via Giovanni Giolitti and find the Termini (MA-MB-FS) bus stop of bus number 70 (Clodio). Time: 2 minutes (50 meters).
- Take bus number 70 (Clodio) for 10 stops.
- Get off at the Senato stop. Time: 15 minutes (10 stops).
- Proceed on foot towards Via della Vetrina, 5. Time: 3 minutes (200 meters).
Closest Attractions

Piazza Navona
Piazza Navona is one of the most beautiful and renowned square in Rome. It was built by the Pamphili family; noble family of Rome intertwined with political and papal life in the period of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Pope Innocent X (Giovanni Battista Pamphilj, a member of the prestigious family) had the square built with a monumental style. Piazza Navona is one of the most important symbols of Baroque Rome. The square houses some artistic and architectural elements of great value. At the center of the square there is the Fountain of the Four Rivers by Gian Lorenzo Bernini. It represents the four corners of the earth: the Rio della Plata, the Nile, the Ganges, the Danube. Opposite the Bernini fountain is the church of Sant'Agnese in Agone, a work by Francesco Borromini and Girolamo Rainaldi. Finally, the square also houses the Palazzo Pamphilj, a majestic work erected between 1644 and 1650 by Girolamo Rainaldi. The gallery, inside the palace, contains frescoes by Pietro da Cortona. Other prestigious buildings that surround the square are: Palazzo Braschi, Palazzo De Torres, Palazzo Tuccimei; all monumental buildings dedicated to ancient and influential Roman families. ...read

Capitoline Hill
The Capitoline Hill (in Italian "Campidoglio"), also known as Monte Capitolino, sits between the Roman Forum and Piazza Venezia. It is one of the Seven Hills of Rome. The Hill today contains a few ancient ground-level ruins, but most of them are covered up by Medieval and Renaissance palaces. Among these palaces, there are the Capitoline Museums, that surround the magnificent piazza (square), a work designed by none other than the famous artist Michelangelo Buonarroti. The Campidoglio is also the representative office of the municipality of Rome. The offices of the mayor, the council hall (Giulio Cesare hall) and other representative spaces such as the Protomoteca are located here, where the Treaties of Rome (including the founding of the European Economic Community) were signed in 1957; and the Statute in 1998 of Rome (founding of the International Criminal Court). ...read