We offer you an accommodation where you can enjoy your days like a local in an old village house.
The concept of an eco friendly and sustainable holiday is very important for us and for our awesome Urla. That's why in our guest house.
Recycling bins are ready to inspire you to classify your waste if you wish to help our nature to heal itself during your stay.
Using solar panels for lighting the terrace is also the indication of our good intention to maximize the power of mother nature.
The way that bees contribute to the nature is the inspiration for us to form the concept of this guest house for our sensible guests.
We would appreciate your effort if you could support our aim
and share your ideas with us during your stay.
Enjoy your stay!
SpacIous Bedroom
Cozy LIVIng Room
prIVATE kItchen
Our LocatIon
We are located just behind the Malgaca old town square. 100 meters to the bus station and taxi rank.
If you need a car park, there are two options:
Urla Meydan Shopping Mall`s car park is in town center and 100 meters from the guest house. Open 7/24 and daily park fee is 35 TL.
Other option which is a free-open plan public car park on Haydar Cesme Street-No 14 just 50 meters away from our guest house.
Please bear in mind that the street in front of the guest house is too narrow for parking so using the two options above would be more convenient for you to provide you a safe parking alternatives.
Our Guest House
Welcome to Urla Bee Guest House,
We are in the heart of Urla, a small Aegean town nearby Izmir.
Relax in our calm and peaceful guest house and enjoy a great start to your day with lovely local shops and restaurants.
We’re really looking forward to seeing you.
Our Guest house has one living room with kitchen, one double bedroom and private bathroom.
Urla
Urla (Greek: Βουρλά, Vourlá) is a town and the center of the district of the same name in İzmir Province, in Turkey. The district center is located in the middle of the isthmus of a small peninsula which protrudes northwards in the Gulf of İzmir and which carries the same name as the town (Urla Peninsula), but its urban tissue is comparatively loose and extends eastwards to touch the coast and to cover a wide area which also includes a large portion of the peninsula. Sizable parts in the municipal area, owned by absentee landlords, remain uninhabited or are very rural in aspect. The peninsular coastline present a number of compounds constituted by seasonal residences along the beaches and the coves and which are administratively divided between Urla center's municipal area or its depending villages.
Urla district area's eastern end neighbors the westernmost district of the Greater Metropolitan Area of İzmir, Güzelbahçe, and urbanization is much denser across that part, contributing to the whole district's average urbanization rate of 75%. With İzmir center (Konak) at a distance of only 35 km (22 mi), an important part of Urla's population is composed of residents, often wealthy, who commute to the big city every day, access to and from İzmir and Çeşme, an international center of tourism at a distance of 45 km (28 mi) from Urla, having been greatly facilitated by the building of a six-lane highway. Urla district nevertheless manages to preserve an overall outlook of a pleasant suburb and resort, and as it extends to the west along Karaburun Peninsula, where it borders on the districts of Çeşme and Karaburun, secondary residences built along the coast or large farms of the interior, as well as native villages, all bearing typical Aegean characteristics, increase in number. To the south, Urla district neighbors that of Seferihisar and the settlement pattern is thinner in that section, with even some empty land, although housing projects targeting İzmir's professional classes start to show a rising interest for that section as well. In economic terms, agricultural products, and especially the fresh produce for the vast nearby market of İzmir, occupy a prominent place in Urla's economy, with fish, poultry and flowers standing out.
An international Artichoke Festival is celebrated since 2015
The name "Urla" is derived from the Greek Βουρλά ("Vourla") meaning marshlands and the town was cited as such in western sources until the 20th century. Bryela (Byzantine name meaning Woman of God i.e. Holy Maria) whereas it has been suggested that due to the transposition of vowels Bryela has become Vourla, meaning marshlands. Urla is where the ancient city of Klazomenai is located and its remains are much visited, while the name lives on in the unofficial appellation used in the region for part of the coastline of the district, "Kilizman" which is a still-used derivative of Klazomenai. (Former name of Güzelbahçe). With literacy among the highest in Turkey at 97%, Urla is also home to İzmir Institute of Technology. Urla prides itself for having raised two important men of letters, Giorgos Seferis and Necati Cumalı.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urla,_İzmir