(+7) 4959335656 Check-in time - 12:00p Check-out time - 12:00p
Ukraina-Moscow Description
The Ukraina hotel is located in the city centre 5 km from the exhibition complex Expocentre. White House is close to the hotel. For the comfort of the guests there are large parking - disco club Rioon Kutuzovski Jazz bar - gift shops avia tickets rack currency exchange office shops - sauna - pharmacy - communication devices - beauty parlour with solarium - first aid - stomatology - dressmaking and tailoring establishment - laundry and dry cleaning - 24 hrs taxi available. For the safety there are cameras on the floors - electronic room keys. For businessmen there is a business centre. The meetings seminars conferences could be arranged in 2 comfortable conference halls up to 200 guests. One of the biggest restaurants in Moscow - Ukraina has 3 large halls. Two small restaurants - Invino and Atlantic - provide comfort for the guests of the hotel. In bars on the first and second floors you can have dinner and supper - make conversation and have fresh cold beer. The furniture and floors are of natural wood.
Orbitz
"On a whole the staff in this hotel were "Posted: Sat Jan 27 2007 On a whole the staff in this hotel were incredibly rude and unhelpfull.Read entire review
3.0
out of 5
"All Review Photos The Hotel Ukraina is "Posted: Sat Jul 15 2006 All Review Photos The Hotel Ukraina is a huge hotel that overlooks the sprawling city of Moscow. Located near the "White House" at a bend in the...Read entire review
4.0
out of 5
"The building is quite grand and simply"Posted: Tue May 23 2006 The building is quite grand and simply magnificent. We stayed in a cheap room and it was shabby but had a lot of character. The breakfast and room...Read entire review
4.0
out of 5
"For my first visit to Russia, I"Posted: Tue Feb 7 2006 For my first visit to Russia, I didn’t want to stay in a hotel that looked like one in the U.S. The Ukraina did not disappoint. It was not...Read entire review
What's Doing In: Moscow: New York Times Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, this city is becoming more and more attractive to tourists. query.nytimes.com