Hotels & Hostels Tehran Hotel Naderi

Hotel Naderi (Hotel)

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  • Address:
    Jomhuri-ye Eslami Ave, South Tehran 
    Tehran   Iran
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  • Neighbourhood: South Tehran
  • Atmosphere: Retro and Low-key
  • Price Range: Budget

Lonely Planet Review

Take note: if service and fastidious cleanliness are important to you, stop reading now. If you're willing to relax your standards a little in the name of character and price, this atmospheric old haunt of Tehran's bohemian set might be the place for you.

Stepping into the Art Deco-style Naderi is like stepping back about 50 years. Take the prehistoric switchboard in reception, the bakelite telephones and most of the (soft!) beds and 50s-era furniture. The imposing staircase hints at glories past and leads to two floors of spacious, high-ceilinged rooms. Rear rooms overlook a garden and are recommended for light sleepers (the front rooms, including numbers 104 and 204 with balconies, are frightfully noisy.) Also expect dripping taps, holes in the sheets and a manager who we have only seen smile twice during three stays (though other staff are friendlier.) Despite this, the Naderi has a unique charm, convenient location and plenty of potential if you spend a few rials. Downstairs, smoke-filled Café Naderi is a stimulating place to hang out with arty types and grumpy grandfather waiters who seem allergic to issuing change.

Review by author Andrew Burke

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How to book this property

This property has been reviewed and recommended by a Lonely Planet author. However it is not bookable online either with Lonely Planet or with a recommended hotel booking provider. In order to book this property please contact them directly.

  • Telephone: 021 6670 1872

Author Tip

A walk down busy Jomhuri-ye Islami brings you to Tehran's big knock-off clothing markets, which will probably prove more attractive than you might expect. Good shoes, too. On Fridays, a multi-storey carpark near here becomes the Jameh Bazar, filled with all sorts of interesting trash and treasure being sold off blankets. For more conventional sights, the astonishing, eye-popping National Jewels Museum is just round the corner.

Curious Fact

Back when Tehran had a legal - and, by all reports, rocking - nightlife, the Hotel Naderi was one of the places to be seen. Bands played and people (yes, women too) danced in the back garden.