  | Other car rental locations in Alanya (Per day) | |
|
  | Alanya Downtown car rental - Travel Guide |  | Until fifteen years ago, ALANYA was a sleepy coastal town with no more than a handful of flyblown hotels. Now it's one of the Mediterranean coast's major resorts, a booming place that has fortunately managed to hold on to much of its character and is much less crowded than Side, even in midsummer.
Most of old Alanya lies on the great rocky promontory that juts out into the sea, dominating the modern town, the bulk of which is occupied by the castle - an hour's winding climb or a short ride on an hourly bus from the tourist office. At the end of the road is the Iç Kale or inner fortress, built in 1226 and virtually intact with the shell of a Byzantine church, decorated with fading frescoes in the centre. In the northwestern corner of the fortress, a platform gives fine views of the western beaches and the mountains, though this originally served as a springboard from which prisoners were thrown to their deaths on the rocks below. On the opposite side of the promontory, the Kizilkule ("Red Tower") is a 35m-high defensive tower that today houses a pedestrian Ethnographic Museum and has a roof terrace that overlooks the town's eastern harbor. Back down at sea-level, apart from the hotels and restaurants, modern Alanya has little to offer. On the western side of the promontory, the Alanya Museum is filled with local archeological finds and ethnological ephemera, though the best thing about it is the garden, a former Ottoman graveyard. Nearby, the Damlatas or "Cave of Dripping Stones", is a stalactite- and stalagmite-filled cavern with a moist, warm atmosphere said to ease asthma; it's accessible from behind the Damlatas restaurant.
Alanya's beaches, though not particularly clean, are at least extensive, stretching 3km west and 8km east. Finer sand and fewer crowds can be found 23km away on the road to Side at Incekum (meaning "fine sand"), still a beautiful spot despite recent bouts of hotel building. |
|
|
|
|