Serdar Hotel

The Serdar Hotel (Turkmen: Serdar oteli) is a five star hotel in Awaza, Turkmenistan. It is located on the shore of the Caspian Sea. Opened in 2001, it was the first high-rise hotel in the tourist zone of Awaza.

Serdar Hotel
General information
LocationAwaza, Balkan Province, Turkmenistan
Opening2001
Technical details
Floor count11
Design and construction
ArchitectBalkanneftegazstroy, Gamma Inşaat
Other information
Number of rooms226

History

The hotel was built in less than a year, completed in February, 2001, by the Turkish construction company "Gamma" and the Turkmen company "Balkanneftegazstroy".

The hotel was the first hotel in the national tourist zone Awaza, and was inaugurated on April 11, 2001. The ceremony was attended by the Turkmenistan President Saparmurat Niyazov and Chairman of the Mejlis of Turkmenistan Sakhat Muradov.[1][2]

July 21, 2007, the first presentation of the future of the seaside resort Awaza was held at the hotel, attended by dozens of foreign construction firms and investment companies.

Rooms, restaurants and facilities

The 11-storey building is designed for 226 guests. The facilities include a wellness center, tennis courts, a playground, two sea water swimming pools, a sauna, professional masseurs, a restaurant, a cafe bar and a banquet hall.

The hotel has hosted several national summit meetings, presentations and international summits.

gollark: No, 1st gen is 14nm and 2nd gen is 12nm.
gollark: The chipsets are still not 7nm, right? As well as the 1st/2nd gen ones they still seem to sell (they're available very cheaply, at least) and some mobile CPUs.
gollark: They used (still use, I think?) Global Foundries for 12nm/14nm parts.
gollark: Intel, I mean.
gollark: It's been claimed that they were too aggressive, that they tried to do stuff without waiting for EUV technology to come along, that they just went down the wrong development paths, and probably a lot of otherr things.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.