Venue & Hospitality

Welcome to the Official Attendee Housing Site for the" 5th International Conference on Big Data Analysis and Data Mining" , which will be held in the festive city of Rome, Italy. The conference will take place in the following location and dates



Holiday Inn Rome Aurelia Via Aurelia km 8,400 00165 ROMA Dir. Tel +39 06 66509715 Fax +39 06 66414437

Conference Dates: June 20-21,2018

Hotel Services & Amenities

  • Audio/Visual Equipment Rental.
  • Business Center.
  • Business Phone Service.
  • Complimentary Printing Service.
  • Express Mail.
  • Fax.
  • Meeting Rooms.
  • Office Rental.
  • Photo Copying Service.
  • Secretarial Service.
  • Telex.
  • Typewriter.
  • Video Conference.
  • Video Messaging.
  • Video Phone.
  • ATM.
  • Baggage Storage.
Venue Hotel

OMICS International Conference

Venue Hotel Photo

Submit Abstract Register

Venue Hotel

OMICS International Conference

Venue Hotel Photo

Submit Abstract Register

Transportation

Driving Directions to

Leonardo da Vinci Fiumicino (FCO)

  • Distance: 13.05 MI/21.0 KM NORTH to Hotel
  • From Fiumicino airport drive to the junction to Roma, continue on Highway A 91, take exit to Florence/Aurelia and continue to the ring road A90, take exit 1 to Roma/Centro/Aurelia/Porto Civitavecchia, continue to via Aurelia until your destination.

G.B. International Airport Pastine di Ciampino (CIA)

  • Distance: 16.16 MI/26.0 KM SOUTH EAST to Hotel
  • From Ciampino Airport take the link to the ring road A90/E80 to Ardeatina/Pontina/Fiumicino/Porto Civitavecchia and drive 23 km, take exit 1 to Roma/Aurelio/Città del Vaticano get on via Aurelia /SS1 until your destination.

Train

  • From Aurelia Station take via Aurelia SS/1 going northeast, after 900 meters make U-turn, take via Aurelia SS/1, turn on the right in via Bogliasco situated between Agip gas station and the Panorama supermarket.
  • Station Name: Aurelia
  • Distance: 1.55 MI/2.5 KM WEST to Hotel

Subway

  • From the subway station proceed towards southeast from via Ennio Bonifazi, take via Padre Anastasio Gutièrrez then via Gregorio XI, via Michele Pironti continue via Michele Pironti to strada statale 1, take Via Bogliasco located between the Agip gas station and the Panorama supermarket.
  • Subway Station Name: Cornelia
  • Distance: 2.42 MI/3.9 KM SOUTH to Hotel
  • Taxi Charge (one way): €15.00

Route Map

About City

Rome is without doubt one the most exquisite cities in the world; every year millions of tourists come from around the world to eulogize the treasures and masterpieces of Roman art and architecture. Rome was the 11th-most-visited city in the world and 3rd most visited in the Europe and the most popular tourist attraction in Italy. The city is one of the world’s most triumphant city “brands”, both in terms of reputation and assets. Rome is the only city in the world to contain in its interior a whole state; the enclave of Vatican City. Rome has a status of the global city.

Rome hosts all the primary institutions of the nation. Many international institutions are located in in the city, notably cultural and scientific ones – such as the British School, the American Institute, the Scandinavian Institutes, the French Academy, the German Archaeological Institute – for the honour of scholarship in the Eternal City, and Specialized Agencies of the United Nations.

Rome’s historic centre is listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. Monuments and museums such as the Colosseum and the Vatican Museums are among the world’s most visited tourist destinations with these two locations receiving millions of tourists a year. Although associated today only with Latin, ancient Rome was in fact multilingual. In most antiquity Sabine tribes shared the area of what is today Rome with Latin tribes. The Sabine language was one of the Italic groups of ancient Italian languages, along with Etruscan, which would have been the principal language of the last 3 kings who ruled the city till the founding of the Republic in 509 BC. Urganilla, or Plautia Urgulanilla, wife of Emperor Claudius is thought to be a speaker of Etruscan many centuries after this date, as per Suetonius’ entry on Claudius. However Latin, in various evolving forms, was the primary language of Rome, but as the city had immigrants, slaves, residents, ambassadors from many parts of the world it was also multilingual.