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The Ritz-Cartlton, Şişli/İstanbul- Turkey
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1 + 1 RESIDENCE SISLI Property inTurkey

$120.000

Features

  • Car Park
  • Central heating
  • Investment properties
  • Kitchen
  • Lift
  • Security System

Details

1 + 1 RESIDENCE SISLI

ULTRA LUXURY ZERO 1 + 1 RESIDENCE ON THE STREET
ULTRA LUXURY RESIDENCE CARRYING THE TRACES OF HISTORY

A large part of the old buildings in the region, foreign schools, churches and venues still exist today as structural documents of different periods. There are many buildings and places that you can not get enough of exploring and you can see on the constantly renewed Kurtuluş route. In the neighborhood where culture and art are intertwined and the streets are branded, it is possible to easily go to the stores and shopping centers where you can shop with pleasure and where there are world famous brands.

Dormen Theater and entertainment center Bomonti Ada in Kurtuluş, a place where social and cultural life is experienced at a very high pace, is one step closer to you.

If you are a history-loving collection, you can discover analog cameras, old clocks, records and many unique works in Feriköy Antique Market, which is within walking distance.

You can easily discover the rich shopping stores, gourmet restaurants, cafes and bars of Şişli, Osmanbey, Nişantaşı, Teşvikiye, Maçka, Harbiye, Beyoğlu, Mecidiyeköy and Maslak, as well as art galleries and cultural centers, in the immediate vicinity of Kurtuluş.

In addition to the reception service, the project, which has 24/7 security and camera system, also has an indoor parking lot.

Being an investment opportunity that will continuously increase in value, Cadde Life Residence Kurtuluş offers investors the advantage of high rental income as well as being located in the fastest growing region of Istanbul.

Cadde Life Residence Kurtuluş, a residence project with 8 floors, consists of a total of 40 units, 36 independent units and 4 commercial units. The project, which is built on an area of ​​6,000 square meters, has 1 + 1, 2 + 1, 3 + 1, 4 + 1 duplex and 5 + 1 duplex apartments between 75 m2 and 220 m2. Parking is available for each flat.

Osmanbey Metro 8 min,
Nişantaşı 9 minutes,
Taksim Square 15 min.
Karaköy 12 minutes,
Levent 16 minutes,
Ortakoy 20 minutes,
Bomontiada 5 minutes,
Small Farm Park 9 min.

The Apartments Are Available For Sale For Citizenship Purchase.

1 + 1 RESIDENCE SISLI

 

 Sisli Neighbourhoods

Officially designated neighborhoods of Şişli. Some unofficial ones such as Bomonti are not shown.

  • Şişli Merkez (lit. “Şişli Center”) and Cumhuriyeti to its south, commonly called Bomonti after the former Bomonti Brewery, now repurposed as Bomontiada,[10] including the Babylon event venue featuring regular live music. There’s also a presidential museum, and photography on display at the Ara Guler Museum. The name Bomonti is referenced in the name of the Bomonti Hilton hotel, the 39-story Bomonti Park tower,[11] etc.
  • Esentepe – home to the Municipality of Şişli and Zincirlikuyu Cemetery. Neighboring Gayrettepe and Levent neighborhoods of Beşiktaş district and Mecidiyeköy neighborhood, Esentepe also covers the west side of Büyükdere Street at Levent, where most of the plazas are located.
  • Kurtuluş – formerly Tatavla (GreekΤαταύλα, “horse stable”) in the Ottoman period, was home to a Greek and later Armenian community. The district had mostly wooden houses until the fire on April 13, 1929. Afterwards, it was rebuilt in narrow stone streets and, over time, concrete buildings, lined with cafés, patisseries, and shops. This cosmopolitan district has a long history, and has been home to many singers, artists, and actors. There are a small number of old apartment buildings. It was also known mainly for its traditional carnival, which was organized every year before Lent. The peak of the carnival, on the last day of Lent, took place in Kurtuluş and was known as Baklahorani.[12] After the riots of 1955, the Greek community left the area; however, their churches are open on religious holidays.
  • Teşvikiye – uphill from Beşiktaş, an area with many classic European-style buildings as well as a busy high-class shopping district. Since the 19th century, Teşvikiye has been home to many writers (including journalist Abdi Ipekçi, who was assassinated here in 1979), politicians and a great number of prominent business families and still holds a well-established middle-class, including some descendants of Levantine and Jewish families that built many of the stone apartment buildings of Teşvikiye in the Ottoman period.
  • Prominent buildings include the Milli Reasürans building, and the neo-Baroque Teşvikiye Mosque, who established the neighbourhood by building the mosque and the nearby historic Teşvikiye Police Station, encouraging citizens of Istanbul to settle in this new district (hence the name Teşvikiye, from teşvik, encouragement in Turkish.) Abdi İpekçi Avenue. There are a number of well-known schools, including some buildings of Marmara University and Işık Lisesi.
  • Nişantaşı – neighbourhood encompassing Teşvikiye and Harbiye, famous for its many Art Nouveau apartment buildings. The American Hospital, one of the city’s best hospitals, is also located here. Nişantaşı is famous for high-end shopping along Abdi İpekçi Caddesi, Turkey’s most expensive street in terms of lease prices, and the City’s Nişantaşı mall.
  • Mecidiyeköy – Business and shopping district north of the O-1 highway; Istanbul’s main market for computer equipment. Narrow streets of tall office buildings. Home of Galatasaray football club’s Ali Sami Yen Stadium. The Profilo Shopping Center, with its food court, cinemas and bowling alley, is here. Mecidiyeköy Antikacılar Çarşısı (Mecidiyeköy Antiques Bazaar), a large multi-storey building with dozens of antiques shops (the largest of its kind in Istanbul) is located at the eastern edge.
  • Okmeydanı – in the north of Şişli, home to some large hospitals. This was the archery practice ground of the Ottoman armies (hence the name, lit. the square of arrows), an Ottoman mosque was built here. Later the land was planted with fruit trees, and in the 1960s turned over to developers for building as the city expanded. Darülaceze, the Ottoman-period orphanage, is here, built in 1896.
  • Kuştepe – north of the O-1 highway, a gecekondu (illegally built) district of poor housing traditionally occupied by the Romani people in Turkey community and recent migrants from the countryside. Trump Tower and AVM (mall) are located here along the O-1.[13]
  • Pangaltı – home to Saint James Armenian Hospital and Cathedral of the Holy Spirit.
  • ID: 16166
  • Published: May 8, 2021
  • Last Update: August 20, 2022
  • Views: 571