The guest rooms — all of which have private outdoor terraces — recall East Coast summer-house style, with shades of sand, oyster, and white; wood-paneled and gray-tile baths are equipped with custom amenities by perfumer Olivia Giacobetti. Doubles from $371. But what really sets Zadún apart is the personal touch: a tosoani, or private attendant, stands ready to meet your every need, whether that means delivering extra (glass!) collection. © Across the road, 14 cove-facing Lagoon Suites feel like Scandi cottages with white-washed walls, Mongolian cashmere carpets, and retro Daewoo mini fridges. Doubles from $217. They're packed with your favorite ingredients, favorite gadgets, favorite fast cooking hacks, and more. The best sheet pans for home cooks, according to chefs, bakers, and one candy artist. Featuring breathtaking views of the city, the Angel of Independence, and Paseo de la Reforma, the property is well-situated whether you'd prefer to shop or sightsee. In-room extras such as a yoga mat add to the sense that the hotel really knows its clientele. (An attached Shinola retail store offers more opportunities for browsing.) Surrounded by icons of the city — Hotel Hassler on one side, the Trinità dei Monti church on the other — the 6th property from Italian brand Rocco Forte occupies an 18th-century palazzo at the top of the Spanish Steps. budget-friendly breakfasts, lunches, and dinners. The cuisine is fresh and Peruvian-inspired, featuring dishes like river crayfish ceviche and yellow chili quinotto. — Jen Murphy, There’s only one thing to do at Canyon Ranch Woodside, the third property from the legendary wellness brand: slow down and embrace introspection. Our 24 Best Savory Pies. By the time I’d finished breakfast each morning, the grounds would be buzzing — toddlers splashing in the fountains, retirees doing the free tour, and everyone polishing off their visit, in true British style, with tea and cake at tables set out in the sun. Each is a study in stylish efficiency, with motorized blackout shades, a decadent bed, finely crafted accents (including Saarinen Womb chairs and Tulip tables), and terrazzo-clad bathrooms that are, like the TWA Hotel writ large, way better than they need to be. It attracts a suitably hipster-ish crowd of after-work cocktail drinkers, as well as an international clientele who welcome its proximity to the Eurostar terminal. The 169-room hotel sits right on the Grand Canal, just a hop, skip, and a jump away from some of the city’s most famous sights — slip on your shoes and be at Doge’s Palace in less than ten minutes, or Piazza San Marco in less than five. Courtesy of Casa Adela, Credit: But ever since hospitality impresario Ian Schrager took a bet on it and opened the city’s second Edition hotel in the neighborhood’s beating heart, more locals than ever are braving the crowds. The six-acre, 64-room property has a history going back 150 years, but once inside you might not guess that: The airy, light-filled rooms feature enormous walk-in showers (many with open-air outdoor showers as well), heated floors, fireplaces, and amenities from Grown Alchemist (and, if you book one of the rooms with an outdoor soaking tub, CBD bath bombs from Onyx & Rose). Velvet armchairs and a baby-grand piano grace the midcentury-style lounge, where guests can order smoked oysters Kilpatrick or a decadent dinner of osso buco by executive chef Michael Dunston, served by staffers clad in 60s-era uniforms. Doubles from $190. muh) is an unsung hero of the produce aisle. planning meals, and feeding your family. Doubles from $367. The Aman's guest pavilions, all minimalist in style and largely made of cedar, are set along a mountain stream. Each of the 164 guest rooms and 48 suites is designed to rejuvenate: double blackout curtains seal out city lights; a medical-grade filtration system eliminates microbes and allergens; and the Apple TV is preprogrammed with two sets of guided stretches and breath work (one to pep you up in the AM, another to wind down at night). The town’s artisan culture comes through in every room, with blown glass lamps and hand-carved wood furniture, but despite the elegance, the hotel retains the intimate feel of a private home — albeit one with a second-floor pool and craft cocktails. Photo by Bernard Grant. From appetizers to desserts, breakfast to dinner, versatile matzo can do it all. Around it lie winding mountain roads edged with bear-warning signs, little-known temples, and serene cedar groves. A vase of wildflowers decorated the hearth of our suite; a plate from the nearby town of Grottaglie, painted mustard and maroon, was mounted on the wall above. Manage Egg Toasts with Avocado Pesto in my favorites. Snug suites — some just 220 square feet — are meant to evoke gambling dens, while vanities and armchairs sport copper trim that recalls the area’s 18th-century history as a metal-mining boomtown. Though the gym and spa will be familiar to Equinox regulars, both feel amped up here. But there’s more than that: rafting the Futaleufú River, hiking, and wine tastings. Once you’ve driven 30 minutes through the Looney Tunes–like cacti of Saguaro National Park, you’ll snake down a dirt road, likely miss the turn that leads to a solar-powered gate (just me? — Paul Brady, Walking into my suite at the Santa Monica Proper, I felt like I was entering a squiggle. Doubles from $470 per person. — Eloise Basuki, The phrase “outback” often conjures mental images of Australia’s far-flung Red Center and its famed monolith Uluru — a three-hour flight from the nearest major cities. Over the course of 2019, T+L writers and editors have trekked to a remote West Texas escape that feels like a supersize Donald Judd sculpture, hooked trout at a fly-fishing retreat in remote Patagonia, and soaked in the spring-fed baths of a Taiwan resort until their fingers went pruney — tough work, but we’re just that committed to the cause. After an (optional) morning yoga class, guests are treated to a gorgeous, vegan, poolside breakfast made with local ingredients — many grown on property. Gianfranco Guccione/Courtesy of a.d. 1768 Boutique Hotel, Credit: Craftsmanship abounds: millwork adorns the common areas, and each of the 129 rooms and suites is kitted out with Shinola products, from desk clocks and throw blankets to leather goods and power strips. Doubles from $4,200, all-inclusive. Experience-wise, it's all about indulging: in private hot-air balloon flights; in deep-tissue massages on the terrace; in lazy soaks in the hot spring-fed outdoor pool; and, naturally, in chef Vanessa Nava’s Guanajuatean cooking. At all five, Six Senses rightly places sustainability at the forefront: water is purified on site, organic gardens supply the kitchens, and the soothing, neutral-toned rooms are clad in local timber and stone. The 96 light-suffused rooms and suites are done up in creamy white, with private balconies and patios that face the orchid-bedecked grounds. Courtesy of Four Seasons, Credit: ⦠Inspired by the Gran Turismo of that era (during which the neighborhood would, no doubt, have been an essential stop), the 104 rooms combine contemporary shapes and state-of-the-art tech with jewel-toned velvet, damask wallpaper, architectural sketches, and classical busts. But it's the staff who shine brightest, whether they are booking a behind-the-scenes tour of the Louvre or joining you for crémant and truffled peanuts at the bar. Noe DeWitt, Credit: Guests can look out at the Piazza del Duomo from a private balcony, or lounge in La Carretteria, the old carriage house, where breakfast of spremuta, salumi, local olive oil, and colorful Sicilian pastries is served in the morning, and cocktails and passito in the evening. Ford Yates/Courtesy of Blackberry Mountain, Credit: And the lavish breakfast spread is inspired by the flavors of the Silk Road, with some of the best meze I’ve ever had. Umami (/ uË Ë m ÉË m i / from Japanese: æ¨å³), or savoriness, is one of the five basic tastes. The 275 guest rooms, 56 of which are suites, are understated and sleek, with simple white-and-gray decor that's zhuzhed up by colorful patterned carpets and textured walls. Courtesy of Four Seasons Hotel Lanai at Koele, A Sensei Retreat, Credit: Manage Spicy Shakshuka Eggs in my favorites. Courtesy of Zannier Hotels Sonop, Credit: The 158-room property has a playful sense of place, with swaths of marble in the lobby etched to suggest sand dunes and light fixtures that evoke the air bubbles expelled by Qatari pearl divers. Doubles from $375. A simple walk to breakfast is soundtracked by the chatter of parrots, the thrum of hummingbirds, the hhhwwwaaammp of howler monkeys. comforting family meals and classic baked goods. Shopping for Hill's Science Diet Wet Dog Food, Adult 7+ for Senior Dogs, Small Paws for Small Breeds, Savory Stew Chicken & Vegetables, 3.5 oz Trays, 12-pack? The 271 rooms have spare but comfortable interiors by Kelly Wearstler (including, in the public spaces, some furniture from her own home). — Jancee Dunn, Although the former Mauna Lani Bay Hotel was beloved by its loyal guests, the resort — which opened in 1983 — had been looking a little tired of late. Courtesy of JW Marriott, Credit: collection. Technically a cousin to green beans, jicama is a root vegetable from Mexico available year-round that’s delicious cooked or raw. Nature sets the tone and rhythm of the 38-room property, composed of a lodge, stand-alone treehouses, and 16 acres of redwoods, madrone trees, Douglas firs, and oaks. — Lila Harron Battis, If Wes Anderson and Ernest Hemingway ever collaborated on a hotel, it would resemble the Captain Whidbey Inn. Glamorously nipped-and-tucked, full of verve and luxury and winking self-regard, the hotel is ready to reclaim its title as the island’s sexiest, buzziest, see-and-be-seeniest hotel place to stay. The building itself is all cantilevers and chameleonic facades that flicker kingfisher blue or blush pink depending on your vantage point. In the spa, you can alternate between the pools and treatment rooms while enjoying facials and massages that incorporate local ingredients like frankincense and crushed pearls. — Paul Brady, From out in the Namib Desert, Sonop is almost invisible, so well camouflaged are its 10 spacious tents on their hill of sun-warmed boulders. And chef Cole Dickinson’s Mediterranean-influenced cuisine at Layla is worth a visit even if you don’t stay at the hotel: order wild Pacific black cod with harissa cauliflower and Greek yogurt together with a side of his take on patatas bravas (crisp-fried perfect potato cubes drizzled with whipped garlic aioli — basically tater tots that have gone to heaven) and you will be a happy person indeed. — Alexander Lobrano, In the five decades of his wildly successful career, the 72-year-old Belgian designer Axel Vervoordt has created minimalist, wabi-sabi interiors for projects ranging from European castles to Kim Kardashian’s house in Los Angeles. The real show, however, occurs outside — the wild herbs, the flowers, the people-watching. Stephen Kent Johnson/Courtesy of Maison de la Luz, Credit: If Marfa’s getting too crowded for your taste, this is just the place to go. But it had no toehold in southern Italy. And — should you choose to stray off-campus — the enchanting medina is accessible via the house Mercedes at a moment’s notice. Courtesy of Equinox Hotel, Credit: His groundwork shows -- a stay here is like a night at the museum: 500 vintage spools serve as backdrop at the concierge station,1920s sewing patterns are pasted on walls, lampshades resemble hill tribes’ headwear and jewelry. Doubles from $414. — Lila Harron Battis, The Mid-Beach stretch from 23rd Street to 63rd Street continues its ascent as one of the city’s hottest neighborhoods with the October opening of Palihouse Miami Beach. — Peter J. Frank, If, for you, hell is other people and a true vacation means getting as far away from them as humanly possible, then you’ll love Ambergris Cay, a new private-island resort in Turks and Caicos. Courtesy of Oberoi Hotels & Resorts, Credit: Follow the pedestrian-only Calle Independencia, shaded by a rainbow canopy of eminently Instagrammable umbrellas, and you'll land at the property, set within a 16th-century mansion. Guests stay in one of 12 private suites, each with its own unique décor hand-selected from De Marco’s collection of antique furniture and contemporary Puerto Rican art. From there, it’s off to embrace timeless pleasures, like strolling through manicured gardens dotted with statues given by Louis XV, swimming in the fountain turned pool, and savoring pains au chocolat and other Gallic specialties at the restaurant Le Lucé. The hotel’s whopping eight F&B venues double as art galleries (I spy Damien Hirst, Wang Keping, Joe Bradley…), which feels fitting in Victoria Dockside, where art venues of every stripe are popping up right and left. — Kathryn Romeyn, Travelers making the trek to see Rwanda’s mountain gorillas are now spoiled for choice thanks to several new luxury lodges. That’s why we here at T+L spend months obsessively tracking new openings and major overhauls, consulting our trusted network of travel pros and jetsetting writers, and traversing the globe in search of the most memorable, game-changing hotels of the year for our annual It List. Doubles from $3,485— James Rumney, Among the most striking symbols of Rwanda's unlikely transformation into one of the world's leading ecotourism destinations is the new Singita Kwitonda Lodge. Doubles from $239. Sure, but you’ll also be busy exploring the Smokies: There are 25 miles of mountain biking and hiking trails, and a center called the Hub, made up of contemporary, streamlined spaces for hot yoga, rock climbing, pottery, TRX, and more. Remember the constitution, as Peter and James said in 2016, in 2020 will save us from Trump, but nothing will save us from a sleep Joe , the current new extreme Progressives, the deep state within the bureaucracy that serves them rather than WTP,. It feels so utterly...Roman. The no-reservations Evening Bar, meanwhile, is an intimate, 39-seat hideaway that’s well worth the wait. — Hannah Walhout, In a town that’s synonymous with super yachts and bottle-popping beach clubs, Lily of the Valley — a new wellness retreat in St.-Tropez — is something of an anomaly. The Aman aims higher than merely cosseting guests in luxury — it gives them a window into Kyoto's past. Copyright 2021 Meredith Corporation. Courtesy of One & Only Hotels, Credit: — Michael Joseph Gross, Italy’s Pellicano Hotel group — overseen by the eminently stylish Marie-Louise Sciò — has long been synonymous with Il Dolce Far Niente–era glamour. Last summer, that problem was solved when the husband-and-wife team of Kalia Konstantinidou and Antonis Eliopoulos, known for three impeccable properties on Santorini (including Istoria, on last year’s It List), opened Parilio. Same goes for the room service menu, which offers snacks and smoothies that aid in the production of sleep-supporting magnesium and melatonin. Courtesy of The Standard, London, Credit: November 14, 2020 Tango Collies of Iowa is proud to announce a new litter sired by GCHB Tango's Valley Park Magic Man out of CH Ceilidh's Sweet Surprize. — Madeline Bilis, Detroit’s Shinola Hotel was designed with the same built-to-last ethos of the brand’s timepieces, offering a comfortably sleek place to recharge in the heart of a revitalized downtown. Service is friendly and polished, the look stylishly sylvan. The real draw, though, is the restaurant, which serves a nightly tasting menu of dishes that have made Bottura famous, but that are now retired from Francescana’s menu. Alexandra Ribar/Courtesy of Captain Whidbey, Credit: Courtesy of Glacier View Lodge by Pursuit, Credit: I Dropped the Lemon Tart — essentially an upside-down and smashed lemon tart — or Five Ages of Parmigiano Reggiano — an all-white fantasia of different ages of the cheese (24-month, 36-month, etc.) While matzo ball soup is always a comforting option (like our classic Manhattan deli-style recipe below), airy squares of matzo are great in all kinds of sweet and savory dishes. — Angela Peterson, Trondheim, Norway’s third-largest city, had much to recommend it before the Britannia Hotel opened last April, including a blossoming food scene and charming, old-world neighborhoods. — Jonathan Thompson, First, there’s the getting there — and in this case, it really is half the fun. It’s also home to a sultry outpost of Miami restaurant Casa Tua, where chef Michele Fortunato serves Italian-ish dishes with a delicate touch: ricotta gnudi with pine nuts and velvety black-eyed peas or a bistecca crowned with caramelized foie gras. And the food is stellar, from the Brasserie Britannia, which gives its Parisian equivalents a run for their money, to the newly Michelin-starred Speilsalen, a jewel-box room serving Christopher Davidsen’s 10-course seafood-centric tasting menu. Small canals run through a garden of towering Luanta firs and white pines; a dip in the outdoor pool feels like you’re swimming in a forest. But he had never designed an entire hotel — until now. Courtesy of Camissa House, Credit: Doubles from $363. This post was updated in the summer of 2020. At the rooftop bar, sip a bay-leaf-infused Caput Mundi — an old nickname for Rome, which translates literally to “head of the world” — and take in the Eternal City in all its glory. This is the fourth J.K. Place outpost from hotelier Ori Kafri and the first outside Italy — and like its sisters in Florence, Capri, and Rome, it was designed by Florentine architect Michele Bönan, who scoured the flea markets of Paris to furnish the hotel. That’s just on the property itself—beyond the gates, the rain-forested expanse of Arenal Volcano National Park contains countless bird species, rivers, waterfalls, and the near-perfect cone for which it was named. Doubles from $899 per person, all-inclusive. With beaches, restaurants, clubs, and rustic architecture to rival the best in other parts of Greece, plus a chic summer crowd, the only thing the island lacked was a world-class hotel. Interiors by Dialog are decidedly contemporary, with a heavy dose of Scandinavian hygge — think light wood, fireplaces, and faux-fur throws. Located in Trondheim’s peaceful center, the Britannia should put the city squarely on any Scandinavian itinerary. Doubles from $295. Charissa Fay, Credit: Since Palavas-les-Flots has more in common with a Jersey Shore beach town than it does St.-Tropez, many wondered why Guy and Jean-Louis Costes — the minds behind fashion-pack favorite Hotel Costes and a flock of see-and-be-seen restaurants in Paris — made it the location for their first hotel outside the French capital. If you were hoping to try Oops! Doubles from $250. Shamshiri’s touch has transformed a grand building — the 1906 city hall annex in the Central Business District, just around the corner from Lafayette Square — into a place that feels human, like the private home of some charmingly eccentric, fabulously wealthy grande dame. Soraya Matos, Credit: The views from the gym might actually inspire you to work out on vacation; if not, a lounge chair by the outdoor infinity pool overlooking the harbor is a worthy perch. With a mild, earthy, slightly sweet flavor (think: water chestnuts) and apple-like consistency, it’s a great addition to salads, salsas, slaws, and grazing boards. Arrival begins with a stomach-flip of an elevator ride, 60 stories up to the lobby, where towering pink-and-cream floral arrangements by Jeff Leatham provide a welcome hit of color. — David Coggins, It’s fair to say Costa Rica has nothing else like Nayara Tented Camp, the 31-suite eco-retreat that opened in December near sister properties Nayara Gardens and Nayara Springs. (You can, and should, take the cable car connected to the hotel all the way to the mountaintop.)