Amanjena

Amanjena – the first Amanresort on the African continent

Amanjena – 首間安縵度假村登陸非洲大陸

There is a place in paradise where peace holds time, where nature and culture know no seams, where comfort and luxury unite in style and where water reflects the blush of clay. This place is Amanjena, Morocco’s Moorish rose, a resort secluded in a private lush haven near the pulsating Medina of Marrakech. With Atlas Mountains in your sights let Amanjena take your hand and treat you to the wonders of Africa’s sun-kissed land.

The resort

Amanjena, or ‘peaceful paradise’, is the first Amanresort on the African continent. The property is located just outside the ancient Moroccan city of Marrakech on the southern road to Ouarzazate, the gateway to the Sahara Desert. The High Atlas Mountains claim the Marrakech horizon and the Atlantic coast is just two hours away. The 18-hole Amelkis Championship Golf Course lies immediately alongside Amanjena, with a second course – the Royal Golf Course – just minutes away.

Known in Arabic as Al Medina al-Hamra, the ‘Red City’, due to its rosy-hued walls and structures, Marrakech was the inspiration for Amanjena’s design. The resort’s walls echo the city’s old pisé (rammed earth) buildings as well as the Berber villages that cling to the High Atlas Mountains. Green is also a predominant colour in the oasis of Marrakech – the colour of Islam, paradise, royalty and abundance. The colour of nature gilds Amanjena, too: its lawns and vines, its emerald-clay roofs, Moroccan marble fountains and the dazzle of hand-cut, glazed tiles known as zellij.

Cuisine

The Restaurant is open for dinner and specialises in authentic Moroccan and Mediterranean cuisine. Soft lighting lends warmth to the generously-proportioned room, centred by a scalloped onyx fountain surrounded by olive trees beneath a commanding central skylight. Arched moucharabieh wood screens decorate the upper reaches of onyx pillars while the tinted plâtre ciselé walls are the colour of honey, chiseled with Berber designs. Banquettes and tables line the walls. During the summer months, dinner seating is moved outdoors. The Thai Restaurant, situated alongside the swimming pool, is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. The light-filled room features banks of glass doors and coral-tadlekt walls decorated with old Moroccan leather horse saddles. The Pool Terrace meanwhile is open for breakfast and lunch, overlooking the pool and adjacent golf course. Guests can also enjoy private dining in their Pavilion or Maison. Special dinners or buffets to celebrate a unique occasion can be arranged. Upon request, intimate dinners accompanied by local music can be organised in the Caidal Tent, a traditional and romantic venue situated in an olive grove. Featuring clusters of cotton-sabra armchairs, The Bar is ideal for casual dining, pre-dinner aperitifs and post-dinner nightcaps. Located just off Amanjena’s entranceway, the venue is airily cool in summer and warmly welcoming during winter with its open fireplace and ambient lighting. Smoke-tinted mirrors along with old Berber daggers and Arabic swords in scabbards of deer antler, camel bone and olive wood decorate the walls. Housed within The Bar, The Fumoir offers a selection of cigars.

Library

The two-storey Library features a fireplace and a sixmetre, double-volume ceiling. A balcony runs along the perimeter of the second floor. Light filters in from dozens of windows cut on varying levels into the tadlekt walls. Recessed glass shelving houses books, magazines and newspapers, as well as DVDs and the distinctive green pottery of Tamegroute, a village in the Moroccan Sahara. A selection of travel books and board games is also available. The Library’s tables are of wild-cherry wood inlaid and stained to an ebony gloss. The room’s upper level is fringed by a Moucharabieh-screened railing which encircles most of the room. Cozy masria (Moroccan daybeds) frame the fireplace.

Boutique

The Boutique is located within the cedar-ceilinged colonnade that embraces the main swimming pool. A variety of locally-crafted products is available for purchase including Moroccan art and handicrafts ranging from jewellery to brass lanterns, pottery and antiques. All fabric items for sale including tablecloths, shawls, caftans and djellabas are hand-woven. Some are created exclusively for Amanjena.

strong>Spa

Amanjena’s Spa features two Turkish-style hammams (steam baths) complemented by showers, washrooms, a dressing area and a glassed-in whirlpool. The whirlpool opens onto a fountain courtyard bordered by a two-metre pisé wall. Spa treatments ranging from traditional Moroccan gommage (scrubs) to a selection of massages can be enjoyed at Amanjena’s Spa. Other services include reflexology, facials, manicures, pedicures and waxing. Private treatment rooms offer a peaceful sanctuary for relaxation.

Swimming poolAmanjena’s 33-metre heated outdoor swimming pool is finished in glittering green tiles of écaille de poisson-cut zellij. Chaise lounges and umbrellas line the pool’s terrace, framed by hibiscus. The pool area features a pisé-style arch over a wide wall fountain and a separate shallow pool.

Tennis

Amanjena has two clay tennis courts floodlit for night play. Racquets and balls are complimentary. Guests are recommended to bring their own tennis shoes. The tennis grounds include central minzahs (gazebos) for drinks and rest breaks between matches.

Bicycles

Mountain bikes are available for exploring the paved pathways that lead from Amanjena through the surrounding olive groves and past the golf course and garden villas that lie alongside it.

Internet

Wireless broadband connections are available in all resort accommodations and public areas.

Location

The Moroccans know their country as Maghrib. In Arabic, the word means ‘sunset’ or ‘west,’ acknowledging the Kingdom’s place as the most western of the Arabic countries. Bordered in the north by the Mediterranean Sea (Spain is only an hour’s ferry ride away) and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean, Morocco is blessed with a long coastline and scenic beaches. Add to that four dramatic mountain ranges and the great oases and dunes of the Sahara, and you have a subtropical land of remarkable geographic and climatic diversity. At 4,165 metres high in the High Atlas Mountains, Mount Toubkal is the third highest peak in Africa.

Most international flights to Morocco fly into Casablanca. Frequent daily air service connects Casablanca and Marrakech. Direct flights to Marrakech are available from Paris, London, Munich, Lisbon and other major European cities. Please check with your travel agent or through the Internet as new flights are being added all the time.

Amanjena provides complimentary transfers from Marrakech airport (a 20-minute journey) and Casablanca airport (for guests staying three-nights or more), which is approximately 2½ hours away.

Route de Ouarzazate, km 12, Marrakech, Morocco 40000

BP 2405, Poste principale de Gueliz

Tel: (212) 524 399 000 Fax: (212) 524 403 477

E-mail: amanjena@amanresorts.com

www.amanresorts.com

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