Il tuo soggiorno — Hotel La Terraza
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La proprietà — Hotel La Terraza
Hotel La Terraza is a no-frills three-star in central Mérida, defined by its rooftop terrace view of the Sierra Nevada and a small pool. The lobby feels like a functional, clean base for hikers and budget travellers—tile floors, a reception counter, and a few chairs. Its USP is location: two blocks from Plaza Bolívar and walking distance to the teleférico. Best for independent travellers who want a solid, affordable sleep over character or luxury.
Cronache di Merida
Mérida was founded in 1558 by Spanish captain Juan Rodríguez Suárez on the land of the Mucuchíes people. The city grew around a colonial grid, now marked by whitewashed churches and red-tiled roofs, with the Universidad de Los Andes (founded 1785) lending a lively student energy. Its architecture mixes colonial balconies with modernist concrete from post-1950s expansion. Today, Mérida is Venezuela's adventure-sports capital—gateway to Los Nevados and Pico Bolívar—but retains a conservative, Andean pace of life with a strong café culture.
Il momento migliore per visitare
Guida completa di Merida →I migliori mesi
December–February: driest period, clear mountain views, teleférico running consistently. Daytime temps 18-22°C, cool nights.
Peak / Festival Surge
December–February and Semana Santa (March/April). Christmas and Easter bring domestic tourists and pilgrims; hotels often sell out and rates can jump 30-50%.
Stagione di spalla
May–June and September–October. Fewer crowds, lower rates, still mostly dry afternoons, though rain showers are more likely.
Meteo e imballaggio
Mérida sits at 1,600m—days can be warm (25°C) but evenings drop to 10-12°C. Pack layers: a light fleece or jacket for night, a rain shell for sudden showers.
Briefing della città — Merida
- The Mérida cable car (Teleférico de Mérida) reopened after lengthy repairs but is currently running only to Loma Redonda station; check for full-route availability before booking.
- Political protests and fuel shortages intermittently affect transport in the state of Mérida. Confirm road conditions and fuel availability if driving from outside the city.
- Several new cafés and tour operators have opened around the Plaza de Toros area, expanding backpacker-friendly dining options.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Hotel La Terraza, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor, facing the courtyard (interior side) rather than Av. Los Proceres. Upper floors reduce street noise and the lift only serves four floors, so noise stays minimal.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the lobby or entrance (three steps in) – these pick up footfall and lift door noise. Also avoid any room directly overlooking the front parking area, as first-come parking means engines and voices until late.
Best views
Rooms on upper floors (3rd-4th) facing Av. Los Proceres offer a view of the Sierra Nevada foothills – but trade-off is street hum. Courtyard-view rooms are quieter but look onto internal windows and terrace; ask for a front-facing upper room if you want the mountain outlook and can tolerate traffic.
Quietest floors
Floors 3 and 4, especially the end rooms away from the lift shaft.
🔊 Noise notes
Av. Los Proceres is a main avenue with through traffic – buses and motos are common during the day and early evening. Parking lot fills up by late afternoon (15 spaces only), so cars arrive and leave until maybe 10pm. The three-step entrance has no ramp, so luggage drag adds occasional scraping noise. No bar or restaurant on-site, so no late-night party noise.
Insider tips
1. Arrive by 4pm to secure parking – spots are first-come and limited. 2. If you need quiet for sleep, request a courtyard-facing room on floor 3 or 4; if you care more about the view, choose a front-facing upper floor but bring earplugs for morning traffic.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
strutture alberghiere — Hotel La Terraza
Free in lobby and rooms, speed approx 10 Mbps; no login constraints
One lift serves all 4 floors; no stairs-only sections
No complimentary newspapers; building is a 1980s modernist tower with original tiled facade
Check-in 14:00–22:00; early bag-drop from 10:00; late check-out fee 50,000 VES until 16:00 if available
Free for same-day, no cost
No step-free access; entrance via 3 steps; no wheelchair-accessible rooms
On-site free parking for 15 cars, first-come; no valet or EV charging
Tasse, imposte e depositi
City / tourist tax: None
Deposit & card hold: 50% advance deposit by bank transfer or card; incidental hold of 50,000 VES at check-in
Faith & Dietary vicino
- Church: Parroquia Universitaria Jesús Maestro (648 m · ~8 min walk)
Stile di vita e ricreazione locale
C.C. Altos de Santa María — 2.5 km · ~31 min walk
Parque Zoológico Los Chorros de Milla — 507 m · ~6 min walk
5 minuti di radio essenziali
Nearest — 1.1 km · ~14 min walk
Moneta e moneta
Get a travel card →Venezuelan Bolívar, VES
Use peer-to-peer exchanges like Cúcuta or local ‘dólar paralelo’ rates; official exchange at airports gives poor rates.
Cash is king; cards rarely accepted outside upscale hotels or malls, and mobile pay is almost nonexistent.
Round up taxi fares or leave 10% at sit-down restaurants; no tipping expected at street stalls or hotels.
Mangiare, fare shopping e viaggiare su un budget
Cheap car hire →Black coffee at a bakery or street stall, about 5 VES (pre-2021 rates adjusted for current inflation).
‘Pabellón criollo’ or ‘arepa’ from a small local eatery, around 10 VES.
Main dish at a modest local restaurant, roughly 15 VES.
Around Plaza Bolívar and the Mercado Principal — arepas, empanadas, and grilled corn on the cob.
Abastos (small grocers) or chain markets like Makro (limited stock).
Mercado Principal or Calle 24 — stalls with basic clothing and textiles.
Bus from the airport to city centre ~2 VES; city buses or shared taxis ~1 VES per ride.
Bring US dollars in small bills for better exchange rates; eat at lunchtime set menus (menú del día); bargain at markets for souvenirs.
Emergency Contacts
MeridaVenezuela uses a single emergency number, 171, for police, ambulance, and fire services. In Mérida, the local police (Policía del Estado Mérida) can also be reached at +58 274 252 3264 for non-urgent matters. For tourist assistance, contact Corpoturismo Mérida at +58 274 252 4042.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Merida, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Hotel La Terraza
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 1.1 km · ~14 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Girare intorno
Terminal de Mérida (bus station) → Plaza Bolívar (near Hotel La Terraza)
💡 Flag it down on Avenida 4: the sign says 'Terminal–Centro'. Pay the driver in cash (coins or small bills). Get off at the stop after the big church (Parque Bolívar) — it's a two-minute flat walk to the hotel.
Teleférico Station (Mucumbají) → Avenida 3, near Hotel La Terraza
💡 Use this bus after the cable car ride — it drops you three blocks from the hotel on Avenida 3. Wave it down anywhere on the main road. Don't expect a schedule; it comes when it's full.
Anywhere in central Mérida → Hotel La Terraza
💡 Avoid taxis parked directly outside hotels — they charge double. Walk to the Plaza Bolívar rank (two blocks away) and agree a flat fare. For short trips, just pay 3,000 VES or 300,000 VES if using local currency.
Alberto Carnevalli Airport (MRD) → Hotel La Terraza, Mérida
💡 Negotiate the fare before getting in — standard rate is about 250,000–300,000 VES (as of mid-2025). The driver will wait at arrivals; look for a blue vest with 'ALBERTO's' written on it.
Domande frequenti
What are the best rooms at Hotel La Terraza?
Request a room on the 3rd or 4th floor, facing the courtyard (interior side) rather than Av. Los Proceres. Upper floors reduce street noise and the lift only serves four floors, so noise stays minimal.
Which rooms should I avoid at Hotel La Terraza?
Avoid ground-floor rooms near the lobby or entrance (three steps in) – these pick up footfall and lift door noise. Also avoid any room directly overlooking the front parking area, as first-come parking means engines and voices until late.
Is Hotel La Terraza noisy?
Av. Los Proceres is a main avenue with through traffic – buses and motos are common during the day and early evening. Parking lot fills up by late afternoon (15 spaces only), so cars arrive and leave until maybe 10pm. The three-step entrance has no ramp, so luggage drag adds occasional scraping noise. No bar or restaurant on-site, so no late-night party noise.
Which rooms have the best views at Hotel La Terraza?
Rooms on upper floors (3rd-4th) facing Av. Los Proceres offer a view of the Sierra Nevada foothills – but trade-off is street hum. Courtyard-view rooms are quieter but look onto internal windows and terrace; ask for a front-facing upper room if you want the mountain outlook and can tolerate traffic.
What are insider tips for staying at Hotel La Terraza?
1. Arrive by 4pm to secure parking – spots are first-come and limited. 2. If you need quiet for sleep, request a courtyard-facing room on floor 3 or 4; if you care more about the view, choose a front-facing upper floor but bring earplugs for morning traffic.
What time is check-in at Hotel La Terraza?
Check-in at Hotel La Terraza is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Hotel La Terraza have Wi-Fi?
Free in lobby and rooms, speed approx 10 Mbps; no login constraints
Is there a city or tourist tax at Hotel La Terraza?
None
Where can I eat cheaply near Hotel La Terraza?
‘Pabellón criollo’ or ‘arepa’ from a small local eatery, around 10 VES.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Hotel La Terraza?
Bus from the airport to city centre ~2 VES; city buses or shared taxis ~1 VES per ride.
When is the best time to visit Merida?
December–February: driest period, clear mountain views, teleférico running consistently. Daytime temps 18-22°C, cool nights.
Principali attrazioni a Merida
💡 Try the arepas rellenas from stall 47 — they stuff them with shredded beef and guasacaca for about 50 cents. Go before 11am for the best selection.
💡 Go on a Sunday afternoon for the impromptu salsa sessions near the east gate — grab a papelón con limón from the cart at the entrance.
💡 Check out the sculpture garden out back — it's often quieter than the main galleries and has a small café for cheap arepas.
💡 Best visited late afternoon when the light hits the cathedral's white facade — sit on a bench near the fountain, not the statue, to avoid touts.
💡 Take the trail to the mirador for views over the city — it's a 15-minute uphill walk but worth it at sunset. Bring insect repellent.