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Rob’s travel highlights (and lowlights) of 2022

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Yesterday Rhys gave a comprehensive run-down of top recommendations from his very extensive travels in 2022, virtually all of which we documented on the site.

My end of year review is different. Ever since HfP started a decade ago, I have rarely written about my personal travel. This is mainly because I have had children ever since the site started, and travelling with kids impacts so many elements of what you book and do that any review becomes irrelevant if you don’t have kids the same age. Frankly, it is also a relief not to spend my holiday taking pictures of every meal ….

This means that much of what I talk about below hasn’t already been discussed on the site. If you have any questions about any of the resorts mentioned, please drop them into the comments.

Al Maha, Dubai Max Burgess
Al Maha Desert Resort, Dubai

Around May 2022 I had a mini crisis of confidence in my ability to review hotels. I’d done a number of stays in a row which I had found underwhelming, despite having suites in all cases.

It was niggling me. Had I become a grumpy old man who was unable to find any pleasure in totally acceptable luxury hotels? Or had I simply had a run of bad luck, exacerbated by covid staffing issues?

The year had started well …..

2022 started well with a couple of impressive airport hotel reviews. I found both Moxy London Heathrow Airport and Courtyard London Heathrow Airport to be high quality and good value hotels, belying their star ratings. There really is no need to pay more, however fussy you are. Both can be booked with Marriott Bonvoy points.

(I should also give an honourable mention to Ellmauhof, our regular February half-term ski hotel in Austria, which remains a great independent family ski property in a village which is pretty much given over to kids ski lessons. Summer photo below. This can’t be booked on points.)

Ellmauhof ski resort Austria

The rot set in during April:

  • at Le Meridien Hamburg, reviewed here, I was given their top suite via a Marriott Suite Night Award which didn’t do it for me (too big, a bit dark, delays at check-in) despite being theoretically amazing – my review is more positive because I was trying to be objective
  • at St Regis Venice, opened at ludicrous expense, I thought the entire hotel was having a laugh. I was upgraded into a tiny suite with no view, the hotel only opened its canal side bar for half the week (not the half I was there) and on my last day it ‘sold’ all of its outdoor space for a wedding. Why would you pay a four figure nightly sum when you’re not even allowed onto the canal terrace due to a function? Uncollected room service items hanging around and being ignored for 20 minutes at breakfast didn’t help.
  • at Sheraton Frankfurt Airport, also refurbished at great expense, I found a hotel where the lobby bar and business centre were shut, the rooms lacked coffee machines or functioning wi-fi and it had one of the worst club lounges I have ever visited

I did these three stays within the space of six weeks and all had underwhelmed me. Was I losing my touch? Or were they just rubbish?

One Only Le Saint Geran
One&Only Le Saint Geran

Top picks #1: One&Only Le Saint Geran, Mauritius

Recovery started in Mauritius in May.

I had managed to get four Club World seats to Mauritius over May half term which was a result. We stayed at One&Only Le Saint Geran which had been through a top to bottom refurbishment and extension just before the pandemic. (Quick plug for our luxury hotel booking partner Emyr Thomas who sorted this for us and got some extra benefits thrown in.)

Ignore anything you may read about this place from pre-2019. The quality of the rooms is now exceptionally high. I can honestly remember walking around and thinking ‘yes, this is good, I still know it when I see it’.

Two room photos are above and below. I wasn’t won over by Mauritius but that is partly because we underestimated how big it is which meant we couldn’t see everything. If we returned we would stay elsewhere but only to be nearer to what we missed.

You can’t book One&Only hotels on points, unfortunately. It doesn’t even have its own loyalty scheme although you can earn miles in Emirates Skywards from your stays.

One Only Le Saint Geran
View from room at One&Only Le Saint Geran

Top picks #2: Park Hyatt New York

Park Hyatt New York turned out to be another joy. Based in one of the new ‘super skinny’ towers overlooking Central Park, my review says ‘Park Hyatt New York is a supremely classy hotel which oozes wealth from every pore.’

On paper there are things which are wrong about this hotel – lack of public space, lack of park views – but it has style in adundance. I was at St Regis New York two months later in a full suite and would have traded it for a standard room at the Park Hyatt. (The photo below is, amazingly, of their most basic room.) The same goes for the studio suite I had at Thompson Central Park New York a few weeks ago.

Whilst cash rooms here are extortionate, you can buy World of Hyatt points in their current promo and save well over 50% on peak dates.

Park Hyatt New York

Top pick #3: The University Arms, Cambridge

My third favourite is perhaps surprising …. The University Arms in Cambridge, part of Marriott Bonvoy.

I stayed there in 2020, my son and I got a bad room (my wife and daughter got a better one) and we failed to get a restaurant table. I could tell, however, that if done properly this could be a great place to stay.

My daughter did a Summer school in Cambridge this year so we ended up spending two weekends there. On the first my wife and daughter got a ‘turret suite’ on the roof (the bathroom is in a turret – see below) with a huge terrace which was great. My son and I had a first floor suite which was impressive but had some noise from the park.

On our return stay, I got the Stephen Hawking Suite, the biggest in the hotel. Very impressive, although I preferred the turrets and terrace we had previously! These were all via Marriott Suite Night Awards. I would put this hotel in my ‘top 5’ of ‘hotels outside the M25’.

University Arms Cambridge bathroom
University Arms rooftop suite bathroom

Top pick #4: Villa Dubrovnik

We did 10 days across Dubrovnik and Montenegro in late August. The opening of two luxury hotels in Boka Bay – IHG’s Regent Montenegro and One&Only Portonovi – means that you can now spend 7-10 days in the area. Dubrovnik is good for three days but you need something more, and these two hotels – just down the road – offer it. Hyatt is also opening in the area next year.

Villa Dubrovnik is a stunning property which, again, is greater than the sum of its parts. I just realised that I have no room pictures. Here is the ‘James Bond villain lair’ entrance from the road – all you have is a lift, which takes you down into the hotel which is built into the cliff face. It is a beautiful place, although it has no beach, just rocks into the water.

Villa Dubrovnik can be booked on IHG One Rewards points via their partnership with Mr & Mrs Smith.

Villa Dubrovnik
Villa Dubrovnik entrance

We moved on to One&Only Portonovi. This was built at ludicrous cost – it must be the most expensive resort ever built in Europe – for rich Russians, frankly. Whilst the Russians aren’t coming these days, you can’t avoid the ludicrous room decor which screams ‘plutocrat’. This is room decor you expect in New York, not a beach resort:

One Only Portonovi
One&Only Portonovi

That apart, it is a stunning hotel covering 60 acres. It looks and feels like a Dubai luxury resort and I mean that as a compliment.

I strongly recommend Montenegro. One option if you don’t want to see Dubrovnik again is to fly to Tivat, which is literally just a few minutes drive to IHG’s Regent Montenegro. You can hire boats from there, or join group trips, to take you around the bay to Kotor which is basically a mini Dubrovnik. One&Only is across the bay from Tivat and would require a boat transfer or a disproportionately long drive.

Boka Bay Montenegro
Boka Bay, Montenegro

Top pick #5: The Thief, Oslo

I’d had one disappointing day in Oslo about 25 years ago. I went back this year for one night on a glorious August day, staying in the waterside boutique hotel The Thief – review here.

I booked this at a substantial discount (71% off) by buying Choice Privileges points.

Spending an evening around the redeveloped harbour area in the sun was delightful. The weather may have impacted my thoughts about the hotel – I can easily imagine how I could have felt differently had it poured it down for the short time I was there – but The Thief is a classy piece of work however you look at it.

Thief oslo view
View from my room at The Thief

Top pick #6: Andaz Prague

I won’t say anthing about Andaz Prague because a full review is coming up. You can book it with World of Hyatt points. It is a stunning property, and you can’t dislike a hotel where your suite comes with its own conservatory:

Andaz Prague Wintergarden suite
Andaz Prague Wintergarden Suite

One downer …. Al Maha Desert Resort, Dubai

We need to talk about the Al Maha Desert Resort in Dubai, which is part of Marriott Bonvoy.

I had planned to review this again – we ran a comprehensive two-part review of Al Maha from our PR guru Caroline back in 2019 – but I couldn’t find a fair way of doing it justice.

My problem was that I didn’t like it. My kids didn’t like it either. The snag – in terms of the review – was that we didn’t like it because this was my 4th ‘tented camp’ trip and their third. Al Maha doesn’t compare, at all, with The Ritz-Carlton Ras Al Khaimah Al Wadi Desert resort in Ras Al Khaimah, 60 minutes down the road. I reviewed Al Wadi Desert here.

If you’ve never been to a tented camp resort, I’m sure you would be stunned by Al Maha. Once you’ve done a few, though, you ignore the gazelle that walks past your table during dinner (true story) or wanders by your private pool whilst you’re swimming. You start to focus on the cracked sinks, knackered coffee machines, bizarre pricing (it’s all-inclusive, except when it’s not) etc.

Al Maha private pool
Private tent pool at Al Maha, Dubai

I’ve run a couple of photos here. It looks cool, I admit. The camel ride is fun. If you’ve got Marriott Bonvoy points, stay here. If you’re thinking of paying over £1,000 per night in cash, have a look at the Ras alternative. I should stress that Ras is more of a full resort in the desert. If you want to be more in touch with nature – although this is obviously relative when you have a huge private tent with your own pool – then Al Maha is better.

This Flyertalk thread on Al Maha has some griping from me dated late October / November (screen name ‘Raffles’) with a lot of feedback from others who love the place – start from post 1585. I know some people go there for multiple weeks every year. I won’t be joining them.

I should add, in fairness, that our trip was also messed up by my wife having to dash to Germany the day before we arrived due to a family emergency. This obviously impacted the stay and is another reason why I hesitated to write a full review.

Al Maha view from pool
View from villa pool at Al Maha

Other mentions

I don’t know if you trust a one line hotel review, but if it helps you with your own plans in 2023 here are some quick thoughts:

  • Kimpton St Honore Paris is running a lot better than it did during my 2021 stay. A one nighter in 2022 was impressive, albeit helped by a decent upgrade to a suite with a balcony. Book with IHG One Rewards points. I am still having issues with InterContinental Paris Le Grand, directly across the road, since the amazing club lounge was moved and downgraded although the food offering recovered a little this year.
Kimpton Paris hotel balcony
Kimpton Paris balcony
  • Madinat Jumeirah in Dubai continues to be, unquestionably, the best leisure resort developed anywhere in the world this century. I think we’ve now done over 100 nights here.
  • I had two stays at InterContinental Amstel in Amsterdam. I love this place because it is quiet and classy but I admit the rooms are a bit odd. A full refurbishment is about to start – whether it remains an InterContinental remains to be seen. It is nothing like any other InterContinental. Book with IHG One Rewards points, and join InterContinental Ambassador to get a ‘2 for 1’ weekend voucher.
  • Two weeks ago I had my final stay at Park Hyatt Hamburg, which was (it is now closed) probably my wife’s favourite hotel of the world. The recent news that it will eventually reopen as a Conrad was some end-of-year consolation.
A Rosa Travamuende
  • Finally, for somewhere really obscure, I was back at A-Rosa Travemuende (above) in April with my in-laws after a 7-8 year gap. Few people know that Germany has a lot of 5-star beach hotels and this one sits on the Baltic coast in a little seaside town – a little seaside town with not one but two 5-star resorts. There is no logical reason to ever go there BUT if you are in Hamburg for business, and it’s Summer, I would stay on for the weekend and pop over. Even better, everyone in Travemuende speaks English because the nearby ferry terminal handles tourist traffic from Scandinavia. You can’t book this hotel with points.

Conclusion

Despite a wobbly start, I ended the year with my faith in the power of hotels to deliver a fantastic experience restored. I’m talking about an experience which goes far beyond just providing a bed for the night, but which brings some extra joy – either through design, food, pool, spa or amenities – into your life.

In terms of 2023 …. I have a (rebooked due to the delayed opening) Kimpton Mallorca stay at some point. I still need to try Fairmont Windsor Park which is bizarrely under the radar – no-one I know has ever admitted to staying there. I am facing three weeks in Crans-Montana in Switzerland in August whilst my daughter does a Summer camp, which will be interesting. There is also a 10-day family trip to Boston and New York pencilled in for Easter which may or may not happen …. the flexibility of miles bookings is invaluable.

Comments (109)

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  • aseftel says:

    Rob, I always read your reviews with interest precisely because I value your perspective. The world is awash with superficial reviews from people who are just ‘happy to be there’, because it’s their ‘big redemption’ or they got comped a review jolly.

    Arguably it’s a different genre of review, but I’m far more interested in the well-informed opinionated piece that dismisses somewhere expensive for being merely good, when it should be great, or that celebrates the truly exceptional.

    • mvcvz says:

      I have no idea what a “review jolly” might be. But everything else you say is idiotic, so can’t imagine I’m missing much.

      • Rob says:

        A review jolly is when you give up seeing your wife and kids for 3 days, get up at 4am to fly somewhere, sit in restaurants for 2-3 days on your own – for every meal, eat unhealthily because you need some food photos, get hugely behind on your day to day work and then have to spend 3-4 hours on one article (as opposed to the usual hour) later to write it up.

        It is substantially different to a typical business trip where you will socialise, meet new people, see behind the usual tourist facade etc. It is just you sitting alone in a hotel room, 24 hours per day (less a couple of hours sightseeing).

        • Gordon says:

          I’m am sure there’s plenty of positives to your job Rob or you would not bother doing it😉.

          • Rob says:

            Andaz Prague was the first organised hotel review trip I have done outside the UK for 3.5 years.

        • lumma says:

          Do you have to get the super early flight to prove to the wife and kids that you’re not in anyway going to do anything fun while you’re away?

      • Thywillbedone says:

        Reading a travel website and not knowing what a review jolly is ….I’ve drawn my conclusion as to who the idiot is.

  • James says:

    Great summary Rob. Please can you review the Indigo, Exeter? The Indigo in Bath and Stratford are incredible!

  • PBB says:

    If the Fairmont Windsor Park is what was once the Anugraha, I’m not surprised nobody owns up to going there! The weirdo Anugraha vibes must still haunt the place despite it going bust in 1989. Numerous corporate rah-rah stays there in the 80s made it memorable but for all the wrong “this is just a bit too cult-ish” reasons. Lots of tiny single rooms too. Just odd.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      It was completely gutted and re arranged so doubt theres any remnants of anything previous left apart from the exterior.

  • BB says:

    I think there would be an audience for reviews beyond suites and business class seats. A lot of us travel economy class and stay in the lower tiers of rooms, especially when paying for our own travel.

    What is economy like on a Lufthansa 747? Where is it best to sit as a couple travelling economy on an Air France 777? What can we expect when checking into a “classic” room at the W Times Square?

    The above are covered in surface detail in Australia’s SMH Traveller and the Oyster Hotels website, but a more detailed blog would be interesting.

    • Novelty-Socks says:

      Would echo this. My shamobolic planning means it’s rare I get to actually spend my points in the optimal way. Usually I travel economy with my family and business when my company pays!

      • meta says:

        This site is all about how you can travel in business for the price of economy or slightly more and how not to end up in a standard room although sometimes it’s unavoidable.

        • Rob says:

          Most of the hotels featured were booked as standard rooms albeit often upgraded due to status or suite upgrade vouchers. Photos of the 2 One&Only rooms and the Park Hyatt are of standard rooms, albeit at St Geran we paid a bit extra for sea facing. At Al Maha we had standard tents (was a redemption). The Thief was a standard redemption room.

          Exception was Prague which was comped for review purposes.

    • Kevin C says:

      I’ve stayed in a standard room at the W Times Square. It was fine. Good breakfast. Lobby bar very lively.

    • Harry T says:

      Rob has been clear that the majority of the readers of this blog earn £70k+ and live in the south east, so I’m not sure there’s a massive audience here for travelling in Y.

      Don’t stay in Times Square, it’s awful. I did it for seven nights this year because I got a hell of a BRG on the TS EDITION but I’d never stay there again. Imagine Leicester Square but everything smells of piss and weed, and there are even more awful people there. I think I’d stay in Chelsea next time and I wouldn’t spend longer than ten mins in TS.

      • Gordon says:

        Agree re Times Square, Visit once just to say you have done it.
        Looks nice from the online live cams, But visiting is a whole different ball game. Emergency sirens 24/7, I stay outside where hotels are cheaper and travel in for the likes of a show in Madison square garden etc.
        Unless you have to travel there for business, Once you have done it it’s time to try somewhere else. A stop over in NY on route to the Caribbean at Christmas is nice.

      • BB says:

        We earn a fair bit more than that, but still choose economy for the value presented. Business is a treat, like a Michelin star restaurant vs. the local restaurant.

        We gave up on Avios a while back and now just convert Amex MRP into Asia Miles, but chasing availability these days is a headache rather than an opportunity. Booking simple economy on something like Singapore Airlines is all round easier.

      • Hbommie says:

        7 nights in Times Sq? I feel your pain, really do.

    • BuildBackBetter says:

      Economy class experience depends a lot on unpredictable factors – window vs aisle vs middle seat; too many differences between aircraft models; different IFE within same airline; unpredictable service standards etc. For example, an old passenger was seated in the exit row of a 787, likely booked by a family member who paid extra for exit row seats. But the passenger found it uncomfortable as seat width was reduced by tray tables located between the seats. There are just too many variables in economy class. Ultimately your experience will be vastly dependent on if you travel with family / friends. You might forget all other inconveniences.

      • Niallinhk says:

        +1 I recently flew HKG-BOM with Cathay Pacific in economy. Normally their cabin service is very good, but it was a bit shambolic. I think most of the cabin crew were new recruits. I then flew BOM-LHR, the whole journey was quite the adventure. However I ended up at the back of a 777-200, it was better than the horror reviews I have read about sitting at the back. Service was good. It also had the new Club Suite up front which looked very nice, although somehow seemed a little cramped compared to Cathay Business, imo.

  • Freddy says:

    Can’t believe there are no plans for a centre parcs return!

  • Dev says:

    Team HfP, try to add India onto your list of places to review. There is a ton of Marriott, Hyatts, Hilton’s, etc dotted all over the country with all their brands represented at reasonable prices.

    Even better, Brits can now get an E-visa for entry into India.

    • Gordon says:

      Me and the OH planned to visit India a couple of years ago,Delhi to visit friend’s and then Goa for a beach stay and then the gateway to India Mumbai to stay at the Taj Mahal hotel, All hotels were booked through Emyr, We we’re so looking forward to the Taj, But Covid thwarted our plans and had to cancel flights and hotels, such a disappointment, We are definitely going to visit India soon.

    • BuildBackBetter says:

      What would be useful is reviews of aspirational properties like the Taj / Oberoi palaces. Not the cookie clutter Marriotts and Courtyards.

    • Paul says:

      Is the e visa still the price of a small family car? I have avoided India since the introduction of hugely costly visas

    • lumma says:

      I thought we’d been stopped getting the Indian Evisa altogether and it was a nightmare getting a regular one presently?

    • yorkieflyer says:

      India is the only country I would never return to, an awful cesspit of humanity with appalling wealth disparity and the ghastly caste system. Example highlight naked toddlers sent into the traffic to beg at a junction opposite a Ferrari showroom

      • Gordon says:

        I was stopped at the A13 junction with River road barking East London last week and there was a woman of Eastern European appearance with a child holding a cardboard sign walking along the line of traffic, This is not only confined to east London So Why should India be any different?

        • Londonsteve says:

          Forgive me, but using the term ‘Eastern European’ to describe appearance is both fairly meaningless and downright offensive for the entire CEE region as it’s a common trope for Roma, aka gypsy. A haired individual from Lithuania has precisely nothing in common genetically with someone of Roma heritage from, say, Slovakia, yet both are legitimately ‘eastern European’ as far as geography is concerned. CEE has greater ethnic and cultural diversity than western Europe. Quite apart from that to insinuate that the same sort of things go on in the UK as the example from India is patently incorrect. Our wealth disparities are virtually zero compared to India, and it’s a near certainty that the ‘eastern European’ woman with the child wasn’t from the UK.

        • yorkieflyer says:

          Oh well, I could go on and on, the endless harassment and groping of my conservatively dressed wife, the inevitable Delhi belly (from a five star hotel), the Avis driver in a threadbare uniform( which he had to pay for himself l) with holes in his shoes, local travellers humiliating female cabin crew on a domestic flight, homeless shanty town behind the palace of the wind, rubbish everywhere, locals defecating on station platforms and a very unpleasant altercation with Indian railway staff , soldiers waving guns around and trying to surcharge an already paid for ticket saying the price had gone up since purchase.
          An awful country in my view. Need I go on?

          • Thywillbedone says:

            +1 Yorkieflyer. My insides would never forgive me for a return visit. A friend who stayed in the Taj Mumbai woke up one morning to find a mouse doing laps of the toilet bowl …

        • Lady London says:

          A lot of begging in London, at least from what I saw on Underground trains and around stations, looks to be controlled by people other than the beggars now.

          @LondonSteve I think you’re reading a lot into Yorkieflyer’s comment, that wasn’t actually there or behind the comment at all.

          • Gordon says:

            @LondonSteve, Also did I touch a raw nerve. As your name choice suggests you live in London and have to endure the begging and the Knife crime that is getting out of control now. Pardon me if you don’t live in London and I am being stereotypical again….

          • Londonsteve says:

            @Gordon didn’t mean to have a go at you personally but the widespread use of ‘eastern European’ in the UK to describe everyone from the Baltics to the Balkans is a long standing annoyance. Yes, I live in London and also have the suffer the crime and begging so I understand where you’re coming from. My ancestors are from central Europe (again, invariably referred to as eastern Europe in the UK) and I know that people in that part of the world are distressed about being confused with Roma. It’s like someone from Asia considering Scots and Sicilians as fungible because they’re both European.

      • yorkieflyer says:

        On a more positive note and to provide perspective I’ve enjoyed and thoroughly recommend Nepal, Cambodia, Sri Lanka, Laos, Vietnam and Indonesia. Mynamar off limits now unfortunately but went in the political spring a few years ago and was welcomed everywhere. Thailand and Malaysia both less challenging but pricier and obviously more developed economies

    • Niallinhk says:

      I have just spent a month in India visiting friends. I used my Irish passport to get an e-visa, which came through in about 14hrs. I also have a British passport but prefer the Irish one for going to India. My friend who holds only a British passport, had to do a full visa application. I mean full, including a letter from his employer stating that he was employed and they had approved his holiday leave. He also had to provide a bank statement with proof of funds. There are no e-visas available for those with a British passport.

      As for ‘Delhi belly’, I lived there for four and a half years and ate all kinds of food. I usually only got some kind of stomach infection once a year normally caused by something doing the rounds rather than something I had eaten. Not quite sure why that was so.

      • lumma says:

        The e-visa has came back for British citizens this month, should no longer be any difference for biritsh or Irish passport holders for India.

  • Harry T says:

    It’s interesting you liked the University Arms, as I’ve stayed there multiple times across the last two years and I wouldn’t stay again after my last stay. And I enjoyed my first two stays. I did manage to get one of the top floor suites for my final night this year, using an SNA, which was very nice. However, the customer service has gone downhill substantially and I found the front desk almost universally incompetent – switching rooms for the last night was a complete shambles, with a different answer from everyone – one staff member told me I would have to leave my first room by noon and wander the streets of Cambridge until an unspecified time when my new room would be ready – I am an Ambassador member. I also had a worse room for my first two nights than I did as a Platinum member, with constant bizarre noises from above like a stampeding herd of elephants. They seem to have stopped heating the floors in the bathrooms. Breakfast has also gone downhill, both as an experience and service wise – I preferred it as a La carte. Parker’s Tavern service was very slow in the evening and the food was average. I wouldn’t return unless I had to be in Cambridge and the price was very good.

    • Harry T says:

      Ps I had the Marlowe suite and it had the bathroom in the turret.

      • meta says:

        I actively avoid staying in “luxury” hotels in the UK since pandemic, I have been burnt many times. The service is just lacking and staff inexperienced. It will take a few years (if ever) for improvement.

        • Rob says:

          We haven’t done one either – Four Seasons Hampshire literally doubled its rates (£350ish to £750ish) and for a quick weekend break I can’t justify it. Needing two rooms we would be looking at £3,500 with meals for Fri-Sun.

          • JDB says:

            That’s a bit the story of FS worldwide. It’s really lost its mojo/hospitality at the same time as massively increasing prices. Keeping the owners happy/increasing revenue is now way above customer satisfaction on GM scorecards. It now falls well short of its top tier peers and particularly independents on almost everything save price.

    • Angelamc11 says:

      We stayed at University Arms on FHR this year and were upgraded into the suite with turrets and terrace. We had an amazing stay and the service was impressive. The cocktails were great and the dinner/breakfast were very good. We liked the close proximity to shopping. The only disappointment was the weather.

  • Harry T says:

    @Rob for Boston I would recommend the Liberty, if you want to use Marriott Bonvoy points or earn some elite nights, or just need a good hotel in a decent location. We stayed there in May and were pleased. It’s a very unique style, being based in an old prison, and they’ve had fun with the design. The rooms are comfortable and decent sized too. There are some unique events on in the lobby a few nights a week too – we checked in during a fashion show, which was quite something. We also stayed at the W Boston and didn’t like the location or the hotel very much. The location of the Liberty is ideal, as it’s slightly out of the centre and based in one of the oldest and most affluent areas of Boston. It feels very safe and a little “European” in that area.

    • Rob says:

      Thanks, will take a look.

      • Harry T says:

        You’re welcome. Just shoot me an email if you want to see any pics or want to know more.

    • HAM76 says:

      A decade ago I went to Boston several times and liked the Seaport hotel. it‘s across the airport. You could take a water taxi to the hotel which is a different experience. Back then it also had a no tipping policy that was strictly enforced. More of a conference and business hotel, though, not really luxury.

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