Immobilia Cairo – The Art of Staying in

Serviced apartments have quietly become one of the most intelligent ways to experience a city. Here’s what we found:

A hotel room is designed for sleeping.

Entrance to the apartment at Immobilia Cairo. An Art Deco-inspired blend of vintage originals and modern interpretations

A serviced apartment, on the other hand, is designed for living, offering room to spread out, entertain, work and relax. At Immobilia Cairo, this means spacious living areas, terraces with views of Downtown Cairo and interiors adorned with 19th-century Persian textiles, Jules Leleu furniture and 1950s Murano lamps. The difference is immediate and palpable.

 

The freedom of a kitchen.

Breakfast at Immobilia Cairo with homemade jams

There is a particular pleasure in starting the morning on your own terms: making coffee at your own pace and preparing a meal when you choose. A fully equipped kitchen restores a sense of rhythm and autonomy that no room service menu can ever quite replace.

The tableware at Immobilia Cairo was designed by artists for Malaika.

 

A home with a sense of place.

Rooftop terrace with views over Cairo.

The best serviced apartments don’t feel anonymous. Immobilia’s meticulously restored Art Deco apartments carry the weight of Cairo’s Golden Era — they were once home to Omar Sharif and Leila Mourad and played host to Oum Kalthoum and King Farouk. To stay here is to inhabit a piece of the city’s history.

 

Flexibility without compromise.

The Library at Immobilia Cairo

Whether you stay for one week or three months, the experience remains consistent. There are no adjustment periods or sense of impermanence — just a base that works, from the Carrara marble bathroom to the Egyptian Malaika cotton linens.

 

Guests enjoy curated access to the city.

Living room at Immobilia Cairo

Unlike a conventional hotel, the finest serviced apartments open doors that a standard concierge cannot. At Immobilia, this means private gallery tours, exclusive antique shopping, and visits to master artisans in Cairo and Fayoum — experiencing the city from the inside rather than from the window of a tour bus.