Tablet launched in 2000. We were the original boutique hotel curators, but we always valued the post-stay feedback of guests who booked on our site. So here's the result, a list 25 years in the making: the highest-rated hotels in our history.
LessCrosby Street was Firmdale’s first hotel in New York. The arrival of Kit Kemp’s eclectic design eye, ultra-vivid color sense, and affinity for prints and patterns may in fact have been what put an end to the downtown Manhattan mania for minimalist, monochrome luxury-hotel spaces. Crosby Street’s warehouse-style windows are a fine fit for industrial-influenced SoHo. But behind them: the strong dose of English town-meets-country luxury New York didn’t know it needed.
Our second Firmdale hotel, the Haymarket Hotel comes with its expected share of public and semi-private places — a conservatory, a drawing room, a private dining room — as well as a fine restaurant serving brasserie-style modern English cuisine, and a full-service spa. Where it steps out ahead of its sisters, however, is an 18-meter swimming pool, complete with a poolside bar and a booming sound system.
It’s a rare Tokyo hotel where you’re in touch with nature, but the Capitol Hotel Tokyu is anything but typical. Here, surrounded by greenery on the edge of the Imperial Palace, guests can use the local flora as their calendar: camellias mean winter, cherry blossoms spring, and the red-orange-yellow leaves of the maple tree are a sure sign of fall. A total rebuild by master architect Kengo Kuma offers the clean lines and minimalist aesthetic that typifies a certain Japanese style.
Even if Ett Hem’s aesthetic isn’t strictly homegrown — designer Ilse Crawford is London-born, to a Danish mother — the fact is, it’s probably the finest example anywhere of the current tendency in Scandinavian boutique hotel design: away from the kind of modernism that’s synonymous with “Scandinavian” design and toward something much warmer, a luxe, eclectic, stylish sort of coziness.
The Whitby brings the warmth and coziness of English hospitality to a neighborhood that’s already got plenty of American-style luxury hotels, and proves that Firmdale can compete with anyone in the world on comfort, while looking just that much more stylish and charming while they’re at it. Here, as usual, owner-designer Kit Kemp puts her stamp on things, with trademark bold colors tuned to complement Midtown’s slightly muted palette.
Contemporary design on the Amalfi coast — that alone makes La Minervetta worth noting. The hotel’s twelve guest rooms are bright and sunny — literally, with views through full-length windows over Sorrento, the Bay of Naples and Mount Vesuvius, and figuratively as well, clean-lined and decked out in vivid tones, anywhere from lime green and turquoise to simple, almost Nordic primary colors.
The structure of Hotel Unique is by Niemeyer protegé Ruy Ohtake (himself one of Brazil’s most famous architects) and takes the form of a half-disc, flat at the top. Controversially, Ohtake was not allowed to design the interiors, but designer João Armentano’s gain is ours as well — his restrained spaces balance Ohtake’s flair for the dramatic, and the result is harmonious and relaxed.
You can think of Coal Harbour, on the north edge of Vancouver’s downtown, as stadium seating for the breathtaking panorama that unfolds across the Burrard Inlet. It’s there, in a sleek glass tower, that you’ll find the Loden. Rooms at Loden are available in five levels of understated fabulousness, the pinnacle of which is the Halo Suite, which comes complete with wrap-around terrace for superb mountain-ogling.
The design of Witt Istanbul is by Autoban, the local firm that’s responsible for quite a lot of the contemporary-style interiors you’ll see around town. Their look for the Witt is modernist-inspired but also lush and luxurious, space-age lines expressed in rich textures of wood and leather. Each suite is outfitted with apartment-style comforts, including separate living rooms and kitchens.
The Hotel Chelsea is where just about every artist of any significance lived, stayed, or at least hung out; from Mark Twain to Madonna. Its walls are still adorned with artworks donated by generations of well-known visual artists. And what’s perhaps most impressive about the freshly renovated Chelsea is how much of this romance remains intact, even as it’s been updated for 21st-century boutique-hotel travelers.
Suffice it to say that the Saint James is anything but typical. In Paris an hôtel particulier, a freestanding house, is unusual enough — something like the Saint James, almost a country-style château, surrounded by a wall and garden, is vanishingly rare. It’s fresh off a thorough renovation by Laura Gonzalez, who has updated its unique interiors for a new decade.
The eclectic, bohemian, vintage-inspired style that’s currently all the rage in the United States is also, you’ll find, all the rage in Europe — and in Italy, where the word “vintage” covers several hundred more years of history, the resulting style is rich indeed. For an illustration, you could hardly do better than Soprarno Suites, a small, quiet, intimate little ten-suite hotel right in the heart of Florence.
Sparrows Lodge is not aiming for the mainstream. Recycled from the Fifties and refreshed for a style-conscious clientele, this woodsy hideaway is the kind of place where people play horseshoes, swing wooden tennis rackets and read books by their private campfires. It’s like a dreamy hipster version of the summer camp of your childhood — and it proves there’s certainly a place for a rustic-chic ranch in this corner of the desert.
All that Gaudí architecture has set the bar rather high for Barcelona’s builders, and the Alma Barcelona proves it’s very much up to the challenge. It’s no cathedral, but its interiors, all minimalist subtlety, epitomize the quieter side of Barcelona’s visual style, which is at its best in the largely residential Eixample. It’s the next best thing to keeping your own pied à terre.
The Berkshires revival is well underway. Thanks in part to the redevelopment that’s accompanied MASS MoCA, the contemporary art museum, the formerly industrial town of North Adams is living a second life as a booming cultural destination. Outside the town center you’ll find another piece of reclaimed Berkshires heritage: TOURISTS, a Sixties motor lodge reborn as a very modern, very hip little country boutique hotel.