Leonardo City Tower Hotel

(Redirected from Sheraton City Tower)

Leonardo City Tower Hotel (Hebrew: מלון לאונרדו סיטי טאואר) is a skyscraper in the Tel Aviv District city of Ramat Gan, Israel, and the tallest hotel (although it also contains residential apartments). It was the tallest building in Ramat Gan from its construction in 2000, until 2001, when it was surpassed by the Moshe Aviv Tower.

Leonardo City Tower Hotel
מלון לאונרדו סיטי טאואר
Leonardo City Tower Hotel
Map
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeHotel, Apartments
LocationRamat Gan, Tel Aviv District, Israel
Coordinates32°05′4.23″N 34°47′58.1″E / 32.0845083°N 34.799472°E / 32.0845083; 34.799472
Construction started1998
Opening2000
Height
Roof157 m (515 ft)
Technical details
Floor count41[1]
Design and construction
Architect(s)Barely, Levitzky, Kassif Architects

History

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The Leonardo City Tower was constructed from a design that won first place in a competition. The construction rate of the tower was incredibly quick with one story every five days, without failure. The building was completed in 2000 and operated as a Sheraton until 2009 when it joined the Leonardo chain. The building also contains 200 apartments which boast the benefits of hotel service.

Apartments

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The 200 apartments in the tower can access the hotel service from below, in addition to their own entrance to the building through a mini-mall. The facade is covered with granite and marble.

Hotel

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The Leonardo City Tower hotel operates on fourteen of the forty-two floors of the tower. Under the instructions of Sheraton, there is no thirteenth floor in the building, so the hotel operates from floors four to eighteen. The hotel has 167 guest units, including a Smart Presidential Suite, 31 Smart Executive Suites, 69 Smart Rooms and 66 Deluxe Rooms. The Sheraton City Tower was the first 5-star hotel in Ramat Gan.

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  • An Israeli soap opera called City Tower is supposedly set in the building. The show was shown on local TV.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Leonardo City Tower". D BLK Architects. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
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