Structure
In the heart of the city of Forlì, Hotel Executive is an innovative proposition, ideal for businessmen and those who want to visit the city and discover its beauties and culinary traditions in Romagna. In a unique location, few steps from the historic center and a few kilometers from the Exhibition and Airport make Hotel Executive the best choice for those who want to stay in Forlì
Rooms
Furnished according to a cozy and contemporary design line with warm wooden floors, colorful furnishings and dynamic interplay of spaces, all rooms have the most modern comforts: heating and air conditioning, WiFi connectivity, direct dial telephone, coffee / tea maker, satellite TV, pay per view, hairdryer, bio courtesy set
Services
24-Hour Front Desk, Elevator, Internet Point, Bar, TV Lounge, Conference Room, Parasch, Free Garage, Disabled Facilities & Wheel Chair Access, Fitness Center, Air Conditioning
Animal Friends
Allowed for free of small and medium size upon notice at the time of booking
Conditions
Check in: from 2 pm onwards
Check out: before 11:00
Forlì
Located on the Padana plain along the Via Emilia, the city was founded by the Romans in the 2nd century BC with the name of Forum Livii as a knot of trades at the intersection of the consular road with the road that led to Tuscany. Forli, like other Romagna towns, suffered the barbaric domination of Visigoths, Byzantines, Lombards and Franks, but around the year was a Republic of Ghibelline vocation. The Swabian House's fall was Guido da Montefeltro to become Captain of the People in Forlì. The appearance of the Ordelaffi, which held the city for about two centuries, made the same one embellished in the noble palaces and fortified by the expansion of the Rock. In 1480, the city was entrusted to the Signoria of Girolamo Riario and Caterina Sforza (to which today is the Rocca di Ravaldino); defeated Catherine by Cesare Borgia in 1500, the Pontifical State ruled for Forlì for three centuries. The era of fascism, in the 1920s and 1930s, has left its mark in the buildings of Viale della Libertà and Piazzale della Vittoria. During the Second World War, due to the bombing of the fall of 1944, some of the most beautiful monuments of the city were destroyed, including the Church of San Girolamo with Melozzo's frescoes. Forlì is now a city of art and culture with the presence of university faculties at the Alma Mater Studiorum in Bologna, a new museum site in the former Convent of San Domenico and the Ridolfi Airport, linked to national and international airports. In the center Forlì's historic center, the two main streets of Roman origin are easily recognizable, divided into four main courses (Mazzini, Garibaldi, Diaz and the Republic) converging into Piazza Saffi. Some of the most representative monuments of the various epochs of the city are overlooked: the Romanesque basilica of San Mercuriale with the imposing 12th-century bell tower, the 14th-century Palazzo Comunale and revisited several times with the Clock Tower , the 15th century Palace of the Podestà and Palazzo Albertini, home to interesting exhibitions, and the twentieth-century Palazzo delle Poste, an example of the architecture of the Ventennio. Also worth seeing is the Duomo, the Church of the Carmine, the Oratorio di San Sebastiano, the Municipal Picture Gallery that preserves the Ebe of Canova and the new San Domenico Museums, the Sforza Fortress of Ravaldino