expanding both old and modern city with people from all over Britain and from all over the world with diverse interests and lifestyles. This geographical and historical diversity is illustrated on page Surroundings with the Manchester Cathedral, the Arndale Shopping centre, the National Football Museum, the ancient Cheetham Music School, the Victoria Railway Station, the Metrolink taking you directly to the International Airport, and the Manchester Arena with world stars like Mike Tyson, Whitney Houston and Adele paying you a visit.
The Eagle’s Nest was initially made to please not only one’s comfort and social life but also one’s eyes with designs and ornamentations. The black Granit floor in the white, and a black Granit peninsular worktop give the kitchen a sober style, as do a scarlet red kitchen sink and a black Danish designed extractor completing the black and white character of the kitchen with occasional red spots.
Light oak doors with brass handles, cornices around every wall, and a ceiling rose for every ceiling lamp intend to contribute to your well-being. Marble windowsills, artistically designed interactive wallpapers, and above all, the high ceilings and the large windows along the whole apartment contribute to make 2308 a unique home to live in.
The Eagle’s Nest is the biggest flat in the building (750sqf, 68 sqm), with a higher ceiling than in most City Centre flats, stretches alongside a 13 meter (42.6 feet) long and 263 centimetres (8.6 feet) high wall. This huge wall to over fifty percent consists of windows. You may compare this generously high ceiling with most apartments in Manchester City. You receive a free parking lot included in your rent. If you have no own or rented car you may let the parking lot to somebody else for 100-200£/month.
This home is classified as a two-bedroom flat. To use one’s flat mainly for bedrooms is totally natural in England. Here one lives one’s social life in the pub, and nobody questions the “natural” need for a home serving mainly to sleep in. Here, instead we offer you a large living room and a wider than normal kitchen. You may even temporarily arrange the furniture in the large living room to give space for a small orchestra in a corner and use your living room as a temporary dancefloor for invited guests. Or stroll up and down in front of the huge windows with the feeling that you are not being fenced in by solid walls and low ceilings but free to sing and dance naked if you wish since nobody will see you in front of your dominating windows.
So, now this superb flat has no conventional bedroom only an Alcove with a Queen Size bed well suited for two persons and bespoken wardrobes and cupboards. Hence, the wonderful Eagle’s Nest will not suit everybody’s lifestyle or everybody’s needs.
This Eagle’s Nest is a unique and inviting home on the 23rd and top floor in the centre of the vibrant city of Manchester. Vibrant surroundings, yes, but apartment 2308 offers you also calm and privacy when you need it.
The building City Heights is close to everything, to entertainment, to shopping, to studies, to night life or to getting anywhere you want with ease. A paradise for shopping is only a walking distance away: Harvey Nichols, Selfridges, Zara, H&M and the huge Arndale shopping centre with stores from all major companies, Apple, Hugo Boss, Nike. Wherever you happen to be you’re close to international restaurants like Two inches Argentinean Beef or as close to a complete vegan alternative like Fress and Veranda.
If you want to explore the countryside, Victoria Station, some hundred yards away, takes you to Leeds, Newcastle, Liverpool, and Scotland. At a walking distance the Metrolink takes a football fan to the Old Trafford on the one side of Manchester and to The Etihad on the other. To London you get from Piccadilly, only a couple of Metrolink stations away from the city centre Exchange Square, just around the corner.
Your distance to the ground gives you most of the calm in the Eagle’s Nest. When you stretch out along a sofa, you’ll be close to the birds and the sky with its dramatic changes or its heavenly peace. A clear early winter morning you may see miles away and hill after hill after hill as glistening white as were they made from cotton. The Eagle’s Nest is not a flat in a luxurious ghetto for which they’d charge you up to three to five
thousand pounds where all you may see are your neighbours living in the same kind of luxurious flat as yourself with low ceilings and with nothing else to see than you behind your windows.
The Eagle’s Nest offers you a remarkable privacy despite being a flat among hundred in a huge apartment building. On the floorplan of the 23rd floor you find that 2308 has only one small wall common with a neighbour, and that is the wall behind a dishwasher. This structural isolation will furnish you with a particularly calm privacy in your own home but also offers the possibility for you to make any kind of noise and still disturb no one. Or enjoy a calm and restful ambience high above the city’s clamour.
Here in the Eagle’s Nest, you live close to the sky, but at the same time in the middle of an