With a stay at Riad Louane in Rabat (Medina of Rabat), you'll be steps from Exposition Poupées du Monde and 5 minutes by foot from Rue des Consuls. This riad is 0.3 mi (0.4 km) from Grand Mosque and 0.4 mi (0.6 km) from Central Market.
Take in the views from a rooftop terrace and make use of amenities such as complimentary wireless internet access and tour/ticket assistance.
A complimentary full breakfast is served daily from 7:00 AM to 11:00 AM.
Featured amenities include dry cleaning/laundry services, a 24-hour front desk, and multilingual staff. A roundtrip airport shuttle is provided for a surcharge (available 24 hours).
Make yourself at home in one of the 7 air-conditioned guestrooms. Complimentary wireless internet access is available to keep you connected. Private bathrooms with showers feature complimentary toiletries and hair dryers. Conveniences include safes, and housekeeping is provided daily.
"Finding this riad isn't exactly easy, even if you know which turn to take (there are signs pointing to it). But when you first arrive, you can get lost for a long time. Since it's located in a shopping area, there's trash along the way.
The staff is quite friendly. The riad has several rooms on three floors. It's either genuinely antique or stylized that way. I'm leaning more toward the former.
The room includes a set of towels, decent bed linens, toiletries, a TV (we didn't turn it on), two glasses, and bottles of water.
There's no closet (just a coat rack), no air conditioning (a fan instead), or bedside tables. Most importantly, there's no window facing the street (they didn't warn you about this). There's no shower curtain, so water naturally just misses it.
But all of this is manageable. Apparently, we were very unlucky with our room—it's the first one from the entrance on the ground floor. The door opens directly onto the hall/dining room. The room has two (for some unknown reason) old, flimsy wooden doors and a matching window (not facing the street, but also into the hallway). Everything that happens in the hallway is the same as in your room. I don't know what this trend is – setting out breakfast dishes from 11:00 p.m. to midnight, and not trying to do it quietly, but with a full-throated clatter of dishes. People don't come for breakfast before 8:00 or 9:00 a.m., so it's strange to have to do it at night and disturb other guests' sleep. Another thing: the hotel has a transparent roof, made of thick PVC. It's probably beautiful, but it completely transmits sound from the street, so the calls to prayer are like having a radio on full blast in your room – and not just calls, but sometimes long speeches – very late at night and very early in the morning, around 4:00 a.m.
The breakfasts are hearty and fresh, with hot pastries and freshly squeezed orange juice.
But I wouldn't recommend it, as I had very restless sleep. There is a small pool on the roof, but we didn't use it."