Andromeda Residence

About
Andromeda Residence sits in the Rochari neighbourhood of Mykonos Town — the part of Chora that feels residential rather than touristy, yet puts you less than five minutes on foot from Matogianni Street, Little Venice, and the windmills. The property is a complex of six two-storey Cycladic buildings arranged around a pool, and the accommodation runs from compact double studios to full one-bedroom apartments and maisonettes with separate living spaces.
The self-catering format sets Andromeda Residence apart from the standard Mykonos hotel. Every unit is equipped for independent stays, which matters on an island where eating out every meal quickly becomes expensive. Guests who have reviewed the property rate it 4.6 out of 5 across 107 Google reviews, a score that points to consistent quality rather than occasional fluke.
With a permanent 24-hour reception and a location that borders a genuinely traditional neighbourhood, the property is a workable base for both first-time visitors who want easy access to Chora's core sights and returning travellers who prefer a quieter street to sleep on.
What to Expect
The six two-storey buildings follow the whitewashed, blue-trim aesthetic typical of Mykonos Chora. The layout creates a small-scale compound feel — guests move between their unit and the pool without walking through high-traffic hotel corridors.
Accommodation categories listed on the website include the Double Studio, Superior Studio, Standard Apartment, Superior Maisonette, Maisonette, and One Bedroom Apartment. Studios are the entry point and suit couples or solo travellers comfortable with a compact footprint. The apartments and maisonettes add a separate living area and are better suited to families or guests staying a week or more who want the flexibility of a proper kitchen and a little more space to spread out.
The pool area is described on the property's own site as having a relaxed atmosphere consistent with the surrounding neighbourhood — low-key rather than a scene. Given the proximity to Matogianni and the bars of Little Venice, the ability to return to a quiet outdoor space at the end of the evening is a practical asset.
All studios and apartments are self-catering. This means kitchen or kitchenette facilities for preparing breakfast or simple meals, which is worth factoring into your planning if you're travelling on a budget or with young children.
Facilities and Location
The address — Laka Square, Rochari — places the property in a pocket of Chora that retains some of the cobbled-lane character that development has eroded in more commercial parts of Mykonos Town. From here, Matogianni Street, with its concentration of jewellery stores, fashion boutiques, and art shops, is a short walk south. Little Venice's waterfront cafes and bars are roughly the same distance to the west.
The narrow streets in this part of Chora are pedestrian-only in places, so arriving with luggage by car or taxi requires a short walk from wherever your vehicle can stop. The property's 24-hour desk means late arrivals and early departures are handled without scheduling complications.
For guests who want a swimming option beyond the pool, Mykonos Town's nearest beach access is at Megali Ammos, a short walk south of the port area. Buses from the KTEL station near the Old Port connect to most of the island's major beaches — Paradise, Super Paradise, Elia, and Ornos — from early morning through late evening in high season.
How to Get There
From Mykonos Airport, the drive to Rochari is roughly ten minutes. Taxis wait at the airport exit; agree on the destination neighbourhood before setting off, as Mykonos Town's one-way system and pedestrian lanes mean the driver will likely drop you at the nearest accessible point to the property rather than directly outside.
From the Old Port or New Port (where ferries and catamarans dock), Mykonos Town is walkable uphill in around ten to fifteen minutes. A taxi is the faster option with heavy luggage.
There is no useful public bus route into the residential lanes of Chora itself — the main KTEL bus station near the Old Port is the hub for beach-bound routes, but walking is the standard way to move around Chora once you're based there.
Parking a private car in central Mykonos Town is challenging and heavily restricted in peak season. If you are renting a car for day trips around the island, confirm with the property whether parking is available nearby or whether a vehicle is practical at all.
Best Time to Visit
Mykonos high season runs from late June through August. During these weeks, Matogianni and the waterfront are at maximum density — which means the relatively quiet position of Rochari becomes genuinely valuable as a place to decompress. Prices across the island are at their peak in July and August.
June and September offer a better balance: warm enough for beach days, ferry connections running at near-full frequency, but somewhat less pressure on restaurants and streets. May and October are quieter still, with comfortable temperatures for walking the town and exploring inland villages, though some beach bars and seasonal businesses will be closed or operating reduced hours.
For Mykonos Town itself — the windmills, churches, Little Venice, the museums — season matters less than time of day. Late afternoon and early evening, when the cruise ship day-trippers have departed, the town becomes noticeably calmer and the light is better for photography.
Tips for Visiting
- Book direct to clarify apartment type. The range of unit categories (studios, maisonettes, one-bedroom apartments) means specific requirements — separate bedroom, extra beds, full kitchen — are worth confirming before arrival. Contact the property directly at [email protected] or by phone at +30 2289 024712.
- Arrive with a navigation app loaded offline. Rochari's cobbled lanes don't always match what mapping apps show, and addresses in Mykonos Town can be hard to locate on first approach. The coordinates (37.4444, 25.3297) are reliable for the final approach.
- Plan your car rental use carefully. A rental car parked at the outskirts of Chora is useful for day trips to Ano Mera, the farm-heavy interior, or beaches on the south coast, but driving into the Chora core is largely impractical and legally restricted in places.
- Use the self-catering facilities for breakfast. Bringing supplies from a nearby supermarket and eating breakfast at your apartment saves meaningfully against Mykonos café prices without sacrificing convenience.
- The KTEL bus station is your beach gateway. It's a short walk from Chora and serves Paradise, Ornos, Platys Gialos, and other major beaches multiple times per hour in high season. Tickets are inexpensive and the alternative — taxis in July — involves queues.
- Matogianni Street is walkable but crowded after 7pm. If you want to browse the shops rather than navigate a crowd, go mid-morning or at lunchtime when tour groups are still at the port.
- Pack light footwear suitable for cobblestones. Rochari's streets are uneven in places, and the entire Chora is paved in traditional style — sandals with a grip sole or trainers are more practical than heeled shoes.
- Confirm check-in time for early arrivals. The 24-hour desk means someone is always available, but this doesn't guarantee early room access. Luggage storage during the day is worth asking about when booking.
Address
Laka Square, Rochari, Mykonos, 84600 Mykonos, Greece, Mikonos 846 00, Greece
Phone
+30 2289 024712Website
www.andromeda-mykonos.comOpening Hours
Location
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