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Given that this hotel has 50 elevators and a conference centre connected by a skybridge, its claim to be the biggest in Texas and among the 10 largest in the country seems more than believable. All guest rooms offer modem ports and large work tables, but if you want to venture out, the Chaparral Club offers an acclaimed New American menu with a stunning 38th- floor view and Player’s Bar entertains guests into the wee hours.
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Standard, well-equipped high-rise, off US 75 and just opposite North Park Centre (arguably the best mall in the city). Spacious guest rooms come stuffed to the gills with business paraphernalia of the in- room fax and PC data ports ilk and newly equipped with high-speed internet on several floors. Location is perhaps the best selling point, being handy both for airports, major freeways and the fun restaurants of Greenville Avenue.
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One of Dallas’ most recent hotels nestles in the Park Cities, a fashionable, stylish enclave just north of downtown. Although each of the guest rooms is wired for business and the location is convenient to Love Field and downtown, the hotel is also walking distance from some of the best shopping in town.
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Confusing but harmonious 'Versailles on the prairie’-style hotel, with all mod cons; it stands directly north of the downtown business sector. All rooms have fax and modem ports. Beau Nash restaurant serves fine American cuisine, while the Lady Primrose tea room recreates what Texans believe to be a Victorian English tea shop. Plenty of pursuits nearby, including the historic McKinney Avenue Trolley. The Crescent Court plaza, which is attached to the hotel, includes Stanley Korshak, a bi- level department store dedicated to decadence, several deluxe boutiques and many great restaurants.
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First opened in 1978, this strategically- situated hotel was beginning to show signs of wear – until Hyatt pumped $78 million into renovation and expansion work. Wireless high-speed internet access is available in some areas of the hotel, and half of the rooms have internet access via DSL. The hotel has one of the largest hotel ballrooms in the city (and the only one with a 30-foot ceiling), a fitness centre and a reception area for faster check-in. The hotel still has Antares though, its renowned rotating restaurant that gives diners an eyeful of Dallas from 50 storeys up. Pedestrian tunnels provide convenient access to Union Station and the light rail system.
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