Right across street is a little street that winds into the Jewish quarter. Bus stop (to return to train station) is very near by, around the corner out front on main road. For a business hotel, the decor is a little dark (dark blue). We had rooms 107 and 108; one opened to the street, and the other opened into a chimney of a courtyard (so there was light, but no view). In 108 the bathroom also opened into this courtyard. The Paseo Victoria (main road) has a bakery, and if you keep walking up along Victoria and turn right onto Ronda? Tejares and keep walking it is the modern downtown area complete with lots of shops, people, and the ubiquitous El Corte Ingles department store of Spain.If you walk Lope de Hoces going east, and follow around the bend past the bar/brasserie cafe and turn left, around the corner there is a Fruiteria (very small fruit stand) that sells fruits and water bottles. (Bread can be bought along PAseo Victoria at the Rodilla if you don't want to go to the bocadillos shop across from the hotel.) Like an NH hotel, the bathroom amenities: there was a pretty orange square glycerine soap that smelled like oranges and good enough to eat (not really edible), a toothbrush and paste, a sponge (for washing), two shower caps, in addition to orange smelling shampoo/wash gel tube.
There is a minibar fridge in the rooms, which we did not partake, but I noticed the fridge did not seem to be cold inside at all.
- Nh Hotels córdoba
- Nh Califa córdoba
