It is centrally located and is in walking proximity to Saski park (and then to Old City).
However the neiborhood itself is a bit boring. It is situated in the area destroyed during WW2 and rebuilt in communist times. After 1989 they added several modern building (including the hotel itself). So it's like a piece of modern european city among quite ugly soviet concrete blocks. In a sense, a funny combination.
If you choose Radisson Warsaw - expect you to walk around and use taxi (still quite cheap in Poland).
Another essential advantage - fitness centre was included in price. Didn't try the restaraunt.
Although the hotel provided free internet connection I didn't understand how to connect my laptop neither to wi-fi nor by a cable (provided in the room). As I didn't need internet urgently I didn't address with that problem to reception. Perhaps it's easy, but I would like to have a wi-fi code and instruction in the room by default.





