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Welcome
to the Costa Blanca &
ReliaMobility Hire Service
For The Disabled, Less Able and
The Elderly
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Website re-designed
June 2006
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Hiring and operating a scooter/wheelchair etc. in
any of the Costa Blanca resorts will really enhance your holiday but,
you should remember that safety is paramount at all times.
At Reliamobility we always meet our clients at their
hotel in order to give a comprehensive safety and operating brief and
will stay until the client is happy with the instructions.
Should you have any concerns prior to the holiday
commencing, do not hesitate to contact us by email or telephone. We
respond to emails within 24hrs.
Mobility
is our business; if you think MOBILITY and SAFETY, then you should be
thinking RELIAMOBILITY
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Towns on
The North
Costa Blanca
Coast Line
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Denia
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Twenty
kilometres of coastline, rocky coves and big extensions of sand,
solitary beaches and beaches with both sports and playful activities.
Dénia has a wonderful climate, whilst its landscape, is an added plus
to its blue waters. The nature reserve of el Montgó, rising up, as
Blasco Ibáñez said, like “a giant hand”, has served as a watchtower
for a littoral which has been inhabited for over 4.000 years.
Nevertheless, this out-standing enclave of the Costa Blanca has more:
Its patrimony gives a good account of the historical brilliance of
what it was once protagonist to, and its gradual conversion into a
modern city, in which leisure occupies an out-standing position.
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Access: The A-7 motorway has an
exit at Dénia, or from Ondara, Dénia can be reached by following the
N-332. The railroad communicates Alicante
with Dénia and, by boat, there is daily line with the Balearics.
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Javea / Xàbia
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Xàbia
is situated between two points, the “La Nao” Cape and the “San
Antonio” Cape. In all its
extension and in each one of its three environments: the villa, the
port and the sandy area, the population maintains a balance between
the important traces of the civilisations that chose the area for a
settlement, and the modernity of a contemporary tourist destination.
In the old town are narrow streets of whitewashed houses with
windows, stone doorways and balconies. The littoral is made up of,
beaches, coves and select housing estates, joined together by a
string of viewing-points
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Access: From the A-7 is advisable
to take the exit marked Benissa, or the N-332, which crosses Gata de
Gorgos following the signpost, after 6 kilometres, it also leads to
Jávea
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Calpe
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Under
the attentive gaze of the highest cliff on the Mediterranean, the
Peñón de Ifach, Calpe has grown on
both sides of the Great Rock, symbol and image of the Costa Blanca.
It has been a tourist destination since the 30s due, especially, to
the quality of its beaches, their fine sand and the cleanliness of
their waters. The municipality preserves vestiges of the past in its
old town, and curiosities such as the ruins of the Baños de la Reina,
and some abandoned salt mines. Its fishing port is full of vitality,
where restaurants serve the local fish and seafood.
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Access: Exits 63 and 64 off of
the A-7 main road lead to Calpe. The
N-332 Valencia - Alicante also connects with the municipality. The
population relies on a railway service, which follows the coast, and
regular bus service.
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Altea
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From
the “punta del Mascarat” set in a bay, Altea has found a nook between
the sea and the mountains, granting an almost symbolic image of the
Costa Blanca. With the blue and white dome of its Parochial Church, the
municipality spreads down to the Mediterranean Sea. Small and beautiful
coves and beaches extend along a littoral riddled with the same
captivating white charm held by the town itself
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Access: The A-7 motorway, exit 64,
leads to Altea and the N-332 (Valencia - Alicante) main road crosses
the population. It has a railway station on the FGV, Alicante-Dénia
line. There is also a bus service that communicates the municipality
with the rest of the province. The Altet airport (Alicante) is to 61 km
away
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Benidorm
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Benidorm
is tourism, kilometres of beaches of fine golden sand. Benidorm is the
environment, rest and leisure. It is light and fiestas. Benidorm
enjoys, all year round, the best microclimate of the European
Mediterranean. It is a municipality that long ago was scorned for its
location, perfect for pirate assaults. Today however this same location
is seen as being strategic to say the least, it is modern, complete
city, in regards of infrastructures and services, which lives through
its festivities and shares its privileges with anyone that decides to
visit
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Access: Alicante airport is 60
kilometres away, the A7 motorway, at exit (65) leads directly to the
municipality. It is also possible to reach Benidorm via the N-332.
There is also both a bus and a train service
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San
Juan
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This
crowded beach of almost three kilometres long extends from beaches in
El Campello to Cabo de las Huertas. Very high quality open beach with
fine and almost golden sand. With semi-urban environment, very bustling
life and with tens of restaurants following one another along the
waterfront. Accessible beach with all kind of services to make bathing
easier to people with reduced mobility
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Access:
The A-7
motorway and the 340 and 330 A-roads give access to the city of
Alicante, which has a railway station and an airport located a few
kilometres from the urban centre
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Click on E-Mail
symbol for the ENQUIRY form, if
you require other info
Long Term Requirements? Then ask for our Special Rates
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