Venue & Hospitality
Conference Dates: December 01-02, 2016
Hotel Services & Amenities
- Audio/Visual Equipment Rental.
- Business Center.
- Business Phone Service.
- Complimentary Printing Service.
- Express Mail.
- Fax.
- Meeting Rooms.
- Office Rental.
- Photo Copying Service.
- Secretarial Service.
- Telex.
- Typewriter.
- Video Conference.
- Video Messaging.
- Video Phone.
- ATM.
- Baggage Storage.
Transportation
Driving Directions to
Driving Directions to
Hotel Melia Valencia is located in the fastest growing area in Valencia, next to the Congress Centre on the Corts Valencianes Avenue, only 15 minutes by car from Valencia International Airport and 15 minutes by metro from the new AVE high speed train station. This hotel in Valencia is only 3 kilometres from the centre of the city with excellent travel services by metro, bus or tram.
From the Airport Metro Station:
Get the line 3 to Rafelbunyol at the station Aeroport
Line 3 Arrive to Angel Guimera
Change at Angel Guimerà and get the line 1 to Paterna
Timeout 5 minutes approx.
Line 1 Arrive to Beniferri
Arrive to: Beniferri station. Brief walk to Melia Valencia.
Driving Directions from Taxi / Car:
From Valencia airport to hotel distance is 9.4 km. In current traffic 9 minutes by route CV-365 and CV-35, 10 minutes by route V-30 and 12 minutes by CV-365.
From Valencia Manises International Airport (VLC): follow signs for Castellón - Alicante and then for Feria Valencia, located close to the hotel.
From Valencia Manises International Airport (VLC): take subway line 3 or 5. Get off at Angel Guimerá Station and switch to line 1 to Beniferri. From here follow signs for Palacio de Congresos, just opposite the hotel.
The fastest access from the airport to the conference venue is Taxi. Taxi from the airport to the venue will cost you about 15 € and ready to take you to the conference venue in approximately 15 minutes. (Depends on traffic)
Distance from Metro and Train station
400 m from Beniferri metro station
5 km from AVE train station
Route Map
About City
Valencia is the capital of the self-governing group of Valencia and the third biggest city in Spain after Madrid and Barcelona, with around 800,000 occupants in the managerial focus. Its urban zone develops past the regulatory city limits with a populace of around 1.5 million individuals. Valencia is Spain's third biggest metropolitan region, with a populace running from 1.7 to 2.5 million. The city has worldwide city status. The Port of Valencia is the fifth busiest holder port in Europe and the busiest compartment port on the Mediterranean Sea.
Valencia was established as a Roman settlement in 138 BC. The city is arranged on the banks of the Turia, on the east shoreline of the Iberian Peninsula, fronting the Gulf of Valencia on the Mediterranean Sea. Its notable focus is one of the biggest in Spain, with roughly 169 hectares; this legacy of old landmarks, sees and social attractions makes Valencia one of the nation's most mainstream traveller destinations. Significant landmarks incorporate Valencia Cathedral, the Torres de Serrans, the Torres de Quart, the Llotja de la Seda (pronounced a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1996), and the Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències (City of Arts and Sciences), a stimulation based social and compositional complex planned by Santiago Calatrava and Félix Candela. The Museu de Belles Arts de València houses an extensive gathering of canvases from the fourteenth to the eighteenth hundreds of years, including works by Velázquez, El Greco, and Goya, and an essential arrangement of engravings by Piranesi. The Institut Valencià d'Art Modern (Valencian Institute of Modern Art) houses both changeless accumulations and interim displays of contemporary workmanship and photography.
Valencia is coordinated into a modern territory on the Costa del Azahar (Orange Blossom Coast). Valencia's fundamental celebration is the Falles. The customary Spanish dish, paella, began in Valencia.
Attractions & Landmarks
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