Hotel Metropole * * *

Rossio, 30
1100-200 Lisbon - Portugal

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SPORT FACILITIES AND LEISURE ACTIVITIES AT THE PROPERTY OR NEARBY

 
 

Tower of Belém (12 Kms)

 

Tower of BelemThe quadrangular Tower of Belém is a monument to Portugal's Age of Discovery. Erected between 1515 and 1520, the Manueline-style tower is Portugal's classic landmark and often serves as a symbol of the country. A monument to Portugal's great military and naval past, the tower stands on or near the spot where the caravels once set out across the sea. Its architect, Francisco de Arruda, blended Gothic and Moorish elements, using such architectural details as twisting ropes carved of stone. The coat of arms of Manuel I rests above the loggia, and balconies grace three sides of the monument. Along the balustrade of the loggias, stone crosses represent the Portuguese crusaders. The richness of the facade fades once you cross the drawbridge and enter the Renaissance-style doorway. Gothic severity reigns. There are a few antiques, including a 16th-century throne graced with finials and an inset paneled with pierced Gothic tracery. If you scale the steps leading to the ramparts, you'll be rewarded with a panorama of boats along the Tagus and pastel-washed, tile-roofed old villas in the hills beyond. .

 
 

Maria National Theatre (100 mts)

 

"Maria National Theatre""Maria National Theatre", Situated in the north top of Rossio Square, it was constructed by Fortunato Lodi and inaugurated in 1846. The new theatre represented also a bourgeois appropriation of the prestigious square redesigned in the pombalino époque. With its architecture discreet decoration, it is different from all the other pombalino buildings. It is characterized also by its black and white waves pavement, which causes a great visual impact and had influenced the decoration of other city’s promenade and square pavements

 
 

Castelo de São Jorge( 3.5 Kms)

 

Castelo de São JorgeLocals speak of Saint George's Castle as the cradle of their city, and it might have been where the Portuguese capital began. Its occupation is believed to have predated the Romans -- the hilltop was used as a fortress to guard the Tagus and its settlement below. Beginning in the 5th century A.D., the site was a visigothic fortification; it fell to the Saracens in the early 8th century. Many of the existing walls were erected during the centuries of Moorish domination. The Moors held power until 1147, the year Afonso Henríques chased them out and extended his kingdom south. Even before Lisbon became the capital of the newly emerging nation, the site was used as a royal palace.