Category Archives: Hotels

24-hour room service: Seaside Palm Beach, Gran Canaria

While many of the hotels built in Gran Canaria in the 1960s and 1970s could be considered an affliction on the landscape, the Seaside Palm Beach positively embraces its roots. Set on the edge of the breathtaking sand dunes of Maspalomas, the hotel was built in 1975 in the concrete-megastructure style shared by the island’s big resorts. However, the hotel was re-designed in 2002 by French architect Alberto Pinto. Step inside and the paean to the Seventies is far more stylish than the daunting, parenthesis-shaped exterior indicates.

The style is successfully retro, so much so that the hotel is currently the only Design Hotels member in the Canary Islands. The marble and brass of the lobby seems grand at first, but beyond the check-in desk is a large, modern seating area filled with light from huge windows that overlook the pool and grounds behind. Here, guests can lounge on bright, candy-striped sofas where tables feature quirky sunken fruit bowls. It’s a juxtaposition that works.

Outside, a large veranda wraps around the middle of the hotel, and stairs sweep down to the main swimming pool, poolside bar and restaurant. Beyond are manicured lawns, surrounded by a centuries-old palm grove. Tucked into a far corner of the gardens is the plush wellness spa, offering all manner of treatments. Even if you don’t splash out on one (a Relaxing Massage costs €75), you can still enjoy the Thalassotherapy pools, sauna and steam rooms, and outdoor gym. There is also a discreet nudist area and sauna.

While the design looks to the Seventies for inspiration, thankfully the catering doesn’t. Banish thoughts of tired buffets: breakfast service includes cooked-to-order omelettes, continental platters and more, all of which keeps even the fussiest of eaters full (my party included a vegan, a pescetarian and a fad dieter).

Evening meals are served in the main dining room, which spills out to a terrace, and alternates between a themed gourmet buffet, such as Asian or Italian, and a four-course à la carte meal. The buffets hit the right note, but the à la carte menu less so. While tasty and exquisitely presented, the choices – such as steamed cod or tortellini – were limited. However, the delicious pastries and deserts, which are baked on site, compensated.

A more intimate experience is offered at the Trattoria and Orangerie restaurants, serving Italian and haute cuisine respectively for a supplement to the half-board offering.

The only point where the hotel’s retro image falls down is at the Salon Bar. Although decorated in a plush red Seventies theme, the entertainment was stuck in a time warp. One to avoid unless you like line dancing and magic tricks.

LOCATION

The hotel is in Maspalomas on the southern tip of Gran Canaria. It creeps up to the resort’s sand dunes, which are particularly dramatic at sunrise. A short stroll along the beachfront parade takes you to bars, boutiques and restaurants where the atmosphere is more sophisticated than at the southern resorts of Puerto Rico and Playa del Cura.

The nightlife of Playa del Inglés is a 5km taxi or bus ride away; as is the Yumbo centre, a strange multi-level “destination” full of restaurants, bars and shops, which, after 10pm transforms into the self-styled “Gay Center” with drag shows, bars and clubs.

COMFORT

The 328 rooms maintain the 1970s-luxe theme. Hues are in contrasting lemon and turquoise, coral and blue, or lilac and green. Alternatively, there’s a beige and brown colour-way if you favour a more neutral setting. It’s all tasteful, with over-sized mirror or wood veneer sideboards, Harry Bertoia-inspired wire mesh chairs, and glass tables. The marbled bathrooms are stocked with L’Occitane toiletries, though not all have baths.

Rooms differ only in size and views, ranging from sea to pool, dunes, palm grove and gardens; all have balconies. A superior corner room is available on every floor, identical in furnishing but more spacious and a good option for families. The three variations of suites have separate living areas and come with amenities such as espresso machines and spa baths.

Hotel Paris Eiffel Cambronne

The Paris Eiffel Cambronne Hotel provides an elegant setting from which to enjoy a holiday in Paris. Situated close to the Ecole Militaire, the Eiffel Tower and the Invalides and just a few metro or bus stops from the Montparnasse area, the Latin Quarter and the Champs Elysees, this contemporary styled property is ideal for a leisure break to France’s capital city.

This three-star property has a total of 50 guestrooms; each decorated in a pleasant, modern style and fitted with air conditioning and flat screen TV’s. Free wi-fi internet access is also available in rooms and there is an internet corner with a computer which is free for hotel guests to use.
Start your day with a filling buffet style breakfast in the Paris Eiffel Cambronne Hotel’s sunny dining room before setting off from this superb location to explore the sights, shops and cuisine Paris has long been famous for.

This hotel occupies a central location and is ideal for friends, families and couples looking for a good standard of accommodation from which to enjoy a memorable holiday in Paris. The hotel does not have a swimming pool.

All have – bathroom/shower – WC – hairdryer – air conditioning – flat screen satellite TV – DVD player – Hi-Fi – telephone – wi-fi internet access – (certain amenities may be payable locally).

Please note: the nearest metro stations to the hotel are La Motte-Piquet Grenelle or Cambronne.

The hotel has a sunlit dining room serving buffet style breakfast. The hotel is suitable for
friends, families and couples

Four Seasons George V in France

The palace par excellence, the Four Seasons Hotel George V is a jewel of elegance and refined sophistication in the heart of Paris. Behind its superb Art Deco façade, step into the realm of excellence. You will be impressed by the abundance and beauty of the exquisite flower arrangements enhancing the lobby, the interior court, the superb restaurant “Le cinq”. The Four Seasons Hotel George V provides an outstanding service, discretely attentive and courteous. You will spend memorable moments in this world of ultimate luxury.

Steps from the Champs-Elysées, with private terraces that command all Paris and vibrant facilities accented by 17th-century tapestries and floramastery, Four Seasons Hotel George V Paris has come to define fine service in the City of Light and around the world.

The Four Seasons Hotel George V features 245 guest rooms, including 59 suites and 30 with private terrace. A landmark since 1928, this historic building reflects the very highest Four Seasons standards of comfort and convenience.

Enjoy fine dining at Michelin-starred Restaurant Le Cinq, light snacks at Le Bar, and elegant tea or cocktails in La Galerie, with its summer terrace.

Enjoy the extensive health club and luxurious full-service spa, with swimming pool, saunas, steam bath and whirlpool, fitness instructors and the latest training equipment.

Exclusive couture shops are nearby, and the enchantments of Paris minutes away in any direction.

24-hour room service: Muxima, Algarve, Portugal

Muxima was the perfect journey’s end when I arrived in this patch of Portuguese countryside after a long journey. At this single storey farmstead-turned-guesthouse, surrounded by lavender, eucalyptus, rock roses and jasmine, relaxing is pretty much compulsory. There isn’t much to do, except cool off in the reed-filtered swimming pool, have a massage or sprawl on a daybed on a shady terrace, watching swallows and dragonflies dip and soar, and the wind tug at the trees.

The people responsible are Jorge and his wife, Sofia. The former aid worker and television producer left Lisbon for this part of south-west Portugal in 2005 looking for a new life in the country. The arrival of sons Vicente and Balthazar had led them to seek an alternative lifestyle that would satisfy their nomadic souls.

When they found this farmstead, they named it Muxima – “heart” in the Angolan dialect of Kimbundu. They then set about spending the next 10 months turning the ramshackle building at its core, and the neglected pasture and forest that surrounded it into an environmentally sensitive retreat. “From the beginning, we decided the house should operate with as low energy as possible,” explained Jorge, adding that, with the sun shining on nine days out of 10 here, it’s a great place to benefit from solar energy.


Principled it may be, but Muxima is indulgent, too. Take the breakfasts. Eaten in a little open-sided terrace just below the main building, the food is laid out each morning so you can help yourself without the intrusion of waiter service.

Pick a seat at one of the colourfully painted tables, looking out over the garden, and tuck into freshly made bread (served in a pretty patchwork bag), plum and fig jam, flasks of coffee and hot milk, a jug of freshly squeezed orange juice and, on the day I was there, home-made cake made with a variety of sweet potato that grows only in the surrounding area.

For dinner, you have to head out. Take a gentlehalf-hour stroll into the local village, Aljezur, and order fresh, grilled fish and a bottle of local wine at Restaurante Pont’a Pe, by the river, before walking home in the moonlight. Or buy a picnic from the shop by the bridge and eat on the terrace outside your room at Muxima with candles to help you see and crickets for company.


LOCATION

Around an hour’s drive north-west of Faro, slightly south-east of Aljezur, Muxima is in “the only part of Portugal that remains quite wild”, according to Jorge. “It is technically in the Algarve but the lifestyle here is more like that in the Alentejo, so we call it the ‘Alengarve’”.

Most guests hire a car from Faro airport, but you can take a (four-hour) bus straight to Aljezur from Lisbon, and they’ll come and pick you up. Borrow a Muxima bike for free while you’re there, and you can pedal to two of Portugal’s best beaches in under an hour. At Amoreira you can watch the river Aljezur tumble into the ocean while tucking into a plate of garlicky prawns at a rustic cliff-top restaurant. Or, for surfing, carry on slightly farther to Arrifana.

If you’re interested in birds rather than beaches, take a hike in the neighbouring Southwest Alentejo and Vicentine Coast natural park. A 40km drive east into the region’s green hills brings you to the pretty spa village of Caldas de Monchique, with ornate 18th- and 19th-century buildings, restaurants and spa resorts.

COMFORT

The stylish décor was inspired by the couple’s travels. “We had both travelled and brought things we loved back with us over the years. At the time, I didn’t know why I was buying all these things but when we came here it was obvious. We started unpacking and I thought ‘wow’, we have to use these in our guest rooms,” explained Sofia.

The result might have looked like a student house after an exotic gap year, but, with Sofia’s design skills coming into play, it’s anything but. Wooden floors, brightly painted walls and polished concrete shower rooms form a simple backdrop on to which the carefully collected souvenirs – from intricately woven rugs to punched metal lanterns – have been subtly displayed.

Each room comes with complimentary Wi-Fi, Portuguese chocolates, olive oil toiletries and fresh fruit but, freebies aside, they’re all very different. In the main building are three doubles – Krabi, Zammour and Citrana and a suite named Mangalore – named and styled after places close to Jorge and Sofia’s hearts. Similarly, five minutes’ walk away at the top of a small hill, there are three family-friendly suites, each with kitchenettes – Chaouen, Coba and Sotouboua.

Hotel President Lido di Jesolo, Italy

The three-star Hotel President is located in a quiet area of Lido Di Jesolo approximately 100 metres from the beach and close to the lighthouse, night clubs and other attractions. Being close to Jesolo’s marina, the Hotel President is the perfect place for those keen on water sports.

All rooms are equipped with television, shower, telephone, safety deposit box and balcony with sea view. In addition the President Jesolo Hotel has a large private beach, a swimming pool for adults and children and car park.


Lido Di Jesolo is on the Venetian Riviera, and its six mile long stretch of sandy beach is popular for sunbathing and water sports. There are a number of designer shops lining the lively promenade and a large pedestrianised area where you can stroll in the sun.
The Right Choice?

This hotel is suitable for couples and families looking for a comfortable base from which to explore the shops, try your hand at water sports or catch a bus to Venice.


Swimming Pools

The hotel has a swimming pool and sun terrace with loungers.

Accommodation

All have – bathroom/shower – WC – balcony/terrace –TV – safe – telephone – (certain amenities may be payable locally)
Eating And Drinking
The hotel has a restaurant and a bar.


Suitable For

Couples and Families

George Opera Hotel, Paris

Located in the heart of one of the most beautiful neighborhoods in Paris between the Opera and the Montmartre area, the Hotel George Opera is also ideally positioned just a few minutes from the main Paris train stations (Gare du Nord / Gare Saint Lazare). The George Opera Hotel’s combination of style and a warm welcome guarantee an enjoyable Paris city break. The 44 rooms at this Paris Hotel are fully air conditioned and the simple, elegant design and comfort of the rooms will guarantee full satisfaction throughout your stay. Free Wifi Internet is available at the hotel.

Rooms

Guestrooms at George Opera offer direct-dial phones, in-room safes, and climate control. Televisions come with satellite channels. Bathrooms include hair dryers.

This Paris hotel provides complimentary wireless high-speed Internet access. Business-friendly amenities include multi-line phones. Electronic/magnetic keys are also included. Amenities available on request include irons/ironing boards.


Rooms

Guestrooms at George Opera offer direct-dial phones, in-room safes, and climate control. Televisions come with satellite channels. Bathrooms include hair dryers.

•Private bathroom

•Hair dryer

•Direct-dial phone

•Climate control

•Multi-line phone

•In-room safe

•Iron/ironing board (on request)

•Electronic/magnetic keys

•Satellite television service

•Wireless high-speed Internet access (complimentary)

The Right Choice?

This hotel will appeal to friends, families and couples looking for a comfortable, stylish accommodation in a great area for exploring the city. The opera, department stores, Montmartre area and the Sacre Couer are all within easy reach.

Swimming Pools

The hotel does not have a swimming pool.

Accommodation

All have – bathroom/shower – WC – air conditioning – satellite TV – wi-fi internet access – safe – hairdryer – (certain amenities may be payable locally)

Please note: the nearest metro station to the hotel is Saint Georges.

Eating And Drinking

The hotel has a breakfast room and room service is also available.

Suitable For

Friends, Families and Couples

The Montpellier Chapter, Cheltenham

Pigeons often get a bad press. However, it was these winged pariahs that – back in 1716 – unearthed Cheltenham’s fortune. Blithely pecking away one day, they alerted locals to the presence of an underground spring. Suddenly, all manner of aristocrats and hypochondriacs trotted into town, eager to take the medicinal waters of this leafy Cotswolds corner. King George III arrived to treat his infirmities in 1788, rows of Regency houses then appeared – and the town then known as “Cheltenham Spa” was born.

When The Montpellier Chapter opened late last year, it could have used a little of this good fortune. Perhaps even an enterprising pigeon or two.

The story had started so well. Following successful luxury hotel launches in China (The Opposite House, The Upper House and East hotels), the Swire group turned its attention to Britain. The new brand, Chapter Hotels, was conceived as a series of properties set in the “hearts of British towns and cities”, and the first opened in the Montpellier area of Cheltenham last November without a hitch.

Head chef Tom Rains was lured back to the Cotswolds, where he was born and trained, to preside over the restaurant following stints at Claridge’s and The Berkeley; the library shelves were lined with a collection of pertinent tomes to reflect Cheltenham’s history (a spies section nods towards the nearby GCHQ building).

All was well until the hotel was beset by last winter’s floods. The basement spa was the main casualty. Only a few weeks after fanning out the fashion magazines and lining up the herbal teas, the hotel was forced to close the treatment area and repeat the renovation, while normal business continued upstairs. Now, with the spa fully open again, The Montpellier Chapter is ready to restart its narrative.

A British theme hits you straight away. You walk into a large open-plan reception, past the gleaming white Regency façade, which is topped by a billowing Union flag. It’s not all rosy-cheeked politeness though. Contemporary artwork adorns every space, much of which has been commissioned from Central St Martin’s students and alumni. The work of these artists hangs beside etchings and photographic works created by veteran names such as Susan Hiller and Tacita Dean.

The Swire heritage is also in evidence, with efficient service and a fondness for snappy technology drawn from the parent company’s existing hotels in Asia. Some of the gizmos work (paperless check-in is executed well), while others are a fad too far (iPads loaded with the restaurant wine list, plus reams on grape varieties, might better have been delivered on a plain old sheet of A4). Nevertheless, with further Chapters planned in Exeter and Bristol next year, the Montpellier edition is an inventive beginning.

LOCATION

Montpellier is where Cheltenham’s elite reside. Here, small boutiques jostle for space with wine bars and restaurants such as Brasserie Blanc, Raymond’s informal spin-off of Le Manoir. The centrepiece is the Montpellier Gardens, blooming with flowers and containing a fountain surmounted by a bespectacled Gustav Holst, who was born in Cheltenham and now stands with his baton raised aloft above the water jets.

Too big to rival the quaint charms of Chipping Campden or the sleepy riverside refinement of Bourton-on-the-Water, Cheltenham instead pitches itself as a “touring hub” for the wider Cotswolds area and has devised a burgeoning events calendar – jazz in May, literature in October – that reaches well beyond March’s Gold Cup.

COMFORT

The 60 rooms and one penthouse are spread between the Regency building and a new extension to the back. I slept in the old wing, where my room was furnished with plenty of extras: homemade shortbread, an iPod loaded with Cheltenham guides and playlists, a Nespresso machine and a complimentary mini bar.


However, although the bed was plush and cosseting, and the monochrome bathroom chic and stocked with Aromatherapy Associates products, the décor in my room fell slightly flat. A dizzying combination of lime green furnishings with charcoal grey carpets rather undermined an otherwise handsome aesthetic elsewhere in the hotel.

More exciting options are in the modern crescent, where 16 “feature” rooms stand on two levels along a claret-paned glass corridor, overlooking a pretty outdoor courtyard where breakfast is served on balmy mornings. Open-plan with creamy, neutral hues and oak floors inside, they are divided by sheer curtains, which separate bed from bathroom. Beyond lies Cheltenham Ladies’ College, including tennis courts and sports facilities which all guests can use, free of charge.

Hospes Palacio del Bailio, Cordoba

One of the brightest stars in the Andalusian firmament, the city of Cordoba, together with Seville and Granada, has long been one of that region’s prime destinations.

It’s home to a compact yet picturesque old quarter and a clutch of monuments dating from Roman times and the heyday of Al-Andalus. Above all else, this small city is dominated by the astonishing Mezquita, Moorish Spain’s largest and most spectacular mosque, which was turned into a cathedral in 1523.

The Palacio del Bailio, or Bailiff’s Palace, has a fair stab at reflecting the city’s venerable history. The words “Bailiff” and “Palace” make odd, if not disconcerting, bedfellows but the 16th-century mansion’s origins lie with two noble families and the Lord of Aguilar, a dignitary of the ancient Order of Malta. Today’s visitor might be more swayed by this being Cordoba’s pioneering five-star hotel, as well as its impressive synthesis of heritage and hospitality.

Tucked away in a little knot of streets just south of the Plaza de Colon, this discreet property is an odd blend of old and new. The hotel’s ancient fabric has almost entirely been remodelled and updated within. One part the renovations couldn’t touch was a Roman mosaic floor lurking in the basement and this alone makes the mansion an official Site of Cultural Interest. Once restored, the owners installed a glass floor in the main dining hall – a neat yet practical bit of architectural theatre.

Most of the public interiors have a modern palette of cream walls and contemporary lighting, and it feels as if several designers had a hand here to somewhat random effect. One truly memorable and thoroughly original part of the hotel is the elongated “Neo-arab” library or study (though there are just a few books) with decorative plasterwork and arabesque motifs that beautifully recall Cordoba’s vital Moorish heritage. The main courtyard is a joy, with a formal garden and seating shaded by citrus trees and high walls. There’s also a decent pool, essential in fiery Cordovan summers.

The rooms

Somehow 53 rooms and suites are made to fit in this modest-sized building – all are different and fall under five categories ranging from Dreamer’s to a huge Grand Loft Suite. The cheaper rooms tend towards modern styling while the others have a distinctly old-world heritage feel. All have quality linen and extremely comfortable beds, plus plasma TVs with DVD players. Inevitably some ground-floor Dreamer’s rooms are darker than others and you may not necessarily feel you’re awakening in sun-drenched Anadalusia. Bathrooms feature all the usual amenities except, bizarrely, what some might feel is a practical sink – mine was minimalist, with no room to conveniently place toiletries or knick-knacks though it’s hardly going to ruin one’s day or stay.

The food and drink

Senzone is the hotel’s tapas bar as well as restaurant. The former comprises a long barrel-vaulted chamber in the basement with its own street entrance. Beige walls, rose-pink lampshades, halogen spotlights and downlights, and framed matador pictures lend a pleasing contemporary feel. The restaurant has a separate dining room, though hotel guests tend to be served in the main lofty dining hall with the glass floor (which is also used for breakfast). The food – a sort of modern Andalusian-Euro fusion – is excellent with plenty of pork and fish though some of the menu’s English translation is unintentionally awry (cheese juice anyone?). Starters range from ¤13 to ¤27, mains from ¤20 to ¤30, deserts at ¤8.50; there’s a seven-course tasting menu or a three-course meal for ¤60 per person.

The extras

The Bodyna Spa has several treatment rooms beside a small courtyard offering massages, facials, body treatments (choose from Javan, Moroccan, Thai and Indian “rituals”) and waxing. In the basement, the original vaulted Roman baths have been adapted and modernised with three pools of different temperatures.

24-Hour Room Service: Le Royal Monceau Raffles, Paris, France

When is a palace hotel not a palace hotel? According to the French government, when it doesn’t deliver your bags to the room within 10 minutes of your arrival. This spring, it ordained eight of the nation’s hotels as “Palaces” – hotels considered five star-plus that meet such varied criteria as luggage delivery and historic significance. Perhaps unsurprisingly, half were in Paris.

Athletic bellboys and supersonic lifts notwithstanding, these hotels also possess that innately Parisian grandeur. The interiors transcend the requirements of their guests, brimming with whimsy and artistic flair. Much is made of their history, with only the most subtle concessions to the modern world – flat-screen TVs concealed in Louis XV-style cabinets and directories stashed in antique dressers.

Absent from this year’s list was Le Royal Monceau Raffles Paris, where a uniform expanse of sandstone, curlicues and elegant balconies fits the exterior mould of the palace hotel perfectly. Its absence isn’t surprising, given that it only reopened in October after a two-year renovation. But should it make the cut next year, the concept of the palace hotel will be redefined.

Opened during the Roaring Twenties, Le Royal Monceau was the hangout of choice for intellectuals and bons vivants, from Ernest Hemingway to Coco Chanel. However, two years ago, the doors closed and work began in earnest inside what had become a very weary grande dame.

The style in which it got under way hints at the hotel’s renaissance. Workers were invited to a “demolition party”, involving revelry and wrecking in equal measure. Next, Philippe Starck got to work on reinventing a Parisian palace for the future. His last hotel project in the city was the budget-chic Mama Shelter, way out in the banlieues but bursting with affordable style. That, he says, was for the kids; Le Royal Monceau is for their parents.

The parents he had in mind must have been somewhat more prosperous than their budget-conscious offspring, but connoisseurs of style nonetheless. Starck maintains that he doesn’t want Le Royal Monceau to be fashionable; instead the hotel makes a play for art. There’s a library stocked with expensive art/design books, an art concierge and a curator who will organise four shows a year. A prize for young photographers is also being introduced.

The hub of the action is the Grand Salon, where exquisite Parisians chatter over tea or a long lunch amid objets d’art. By contrast, to one side is a boudoir-like cigar room entirely rendered in red; to the other, antique chandeliers appear to dangle from the ceiling on ribbons; up the central staircase, a stained glass window is set next to a rough grey brick wall and an installation of wood-carved deer and antelope. There are surprises at every turn.

The entire wall leading up to the Italian restaurant, Il Carpaccio, is covered with thousands of tiny black and white seashells while a mussel shell chandelier centrepiece dominates inside. In La Cuisine, the main restaurant, Pierre Hermé oversees the pastry creations. Here, I was surrounded by at least half a dozen lunching fur-wrapped ladies, barely able to open their taut mouths to taste the delicate scallops with endive or heavenly lemon mascarpone and wild strawberry mille-feuille with caramel pastry.

The only shortcoming I experienced was the service – an overly present staff seemed to follow palace etiquette, but it felt overbearing and too formal for this “palace-of-today”.

Location

The 8th arrondissement location belies the hotel’s centrality. Turn left from the entrance and facing you is the might of the Arc de Triomphe (and Charles de Gaulle-Etoile station, at the crux of four Metro lines). To the right is Parc Monceau, a sanctuary of green that bursts with sun-seeking locals in summer. The Champs-Elysées is within the limits of reasonable shopping bag-carrying distance.

Comfort

I was in a Studio Room, the smallest of the categories that rise through 10 levels of deluxe and executive rooms, suites and signature suites. The dreamy décor that unites them is at once classically romantic and timelessly modern. The palette is dusky pink or putty grey, with 1940s-inspired accents of cream and café-au-lait leather furniture, oak, mirrors and luminescent champagne-hued silk eiderdowns. Two large windows overlooking a courtyard add a feeling of space to the moderately-sized room. A map of Paris spans the top of the desk, although this was set under glass at such an angle as to make it impossible to fit an adaptor in the socket.

Minor design faults aside, the detailing is what impresses, giving the impression you’ve walked into an artist’s studio. The lampshades beside the bed are scrawled with notes: “brunch at 11am, 75001″; doodles and letters signed “Jean” are framed by the bed, the water tumblers etched with “beau jour” and “belle nuit” and the pillowcases and chair embroidered with Cocteau-esque faces.

A monogrammed “RM” acoustic guitar leans against the wall, while the art concierge’s weekly recommendations are pinned to the wall (artforbreakfast.com) – on my visit, an eclectic list including Space Invader and Art Paris at the Grand Palais.

Glittering behind a door is the show-stopping bathroom – a narcissist’s dream, covered entirely in mirrors. Palatial indeed.

Martinhal Resort, Algarve, Portugal: Review

Sometimes when a hotel tells you that it’s family-friendly, it means there are high chairs and (if you’re lucky) a baby-changing facility. When Martinhal says it, it means it. The difference is, “family friendly” wasn’t tagged on to an existing hotel – Martinhal started out with this ideal precisely in mind. And before you get the idea that there’s a whiff of Disney or wipe-clean about the place, it rivals any of the design-led hotels that you might have stayed at.

The concept of Martinhal Beach Resort, which fully opened last summer, comes from the founders of Luxury Family Hotels, Nigel Chapman and Nicholas Dickinson (Woolley Grange, Moonfleet Manor, Fowey Hall), who were responsible for marrying a family-focused resort with sleek, contemporary architecture by Conran+Partners. The new-build has, as you might imagine, been sensitively conceived, not least because it’s in a nature reserve; the glass, wood and stone buildings are at ease amid the wilderness.


Which part you stay in depends on what you need. The boutique Hotel Martinhal, perched on a hill that sweeps down to the beach, has 38 rooms, all of which have terraces or balconies with ocean views. Children are welcome here, but given that the rest of the resort is dedicated to spacious, self-catering cottages and villas – Village Houses and Luxury Villas – we decided it made more sense to let the hotel be the preserve of adults.

However, the hotel is peaceful and the resort large enough to accommodate both romantic getaways and family holidays comfortably. The hotel is the location for the fine dining restaurant, O Terraço: crisp white linen on the outside terrace sharply contrasting with the blue sea beyond and rows of sparkling wine glasses reflecting the sun.

Families are particularly well-catered for here. For parents with very young children, there’s a new – UK standardised – crèche, fully equipped with qualified childcare professionals and a toy-box to rival Mary Poppins’ handbag. There’s a children’s club too, and the “Blue Room” is a futuristic den for tweens and teens who might be in the mood to sulk out of the sun and play computer games, table football and board games. For older children and adults, there are classes and activities every day: horseriding, watersports, walking tours, “eco-karting” (think of go-karting, then add a sail), pilates and yoga. That’s in addition to the large gym and Club 98, a tennis and sports club. And if the Atlantic waves prove too bracing, there are five pools (including two designed with toddlers in mind) with food and drink bars attached, and plenty of “fat boy” cushions scattered around (oversized beanbags much beloved of the children they engulf).


Adults might be more interested in the food. The As Dunas restaurant serves freshly-caught fish and seafood (try the delicious tiger prawns), overlooking both the sea and a huge trampoline dug into the sand. Needless to say, this proves extremely popular with children who do their best to shake up what they’ve just eaten while their parents linger over a glass of wine.

Two more eateries, the modern European Os Gambozinos and a juice bar, can be found at The Village Square, the hub of the resort. It lives up to its name, with cobblestones, a market shop for all essentials including fresh bread and takeaway meals, and a row of little play houses that seem to provide endless fun for pre-schoolers.

Location

The resort, in the quiet and unspoilt Sagres area of the far western Algarve, is around an hour and a quarter’s drive from Faro airport. If you’re in the mood to explore, take a short drive to the historic port town of Sagres. It’s a name familiar to Europeans thanks to the beer, but its historical fame is due to Prince Henry the Navigator, a patron of Portugal’s Voyages of Discovery, who in the 15th century set up a navigation school nearby.

Comfort

The bespoke style throughout the resort, created by British designer Michael Sodeau, is worn easily in the beachy environment. Comfortable sofas and clean lines in muted shades fulfil the brief of luxurious functionality. Sodeau kept the Portuguese aesthetic in mind, too, which is why coffee tables are made from cork, and elegant lamps in every room are fashioned from straw. All in all, it makes for a very comfortable stay. Thanks to our wobbly toddler, we noted there are no sharp corners to worry about, too.

The Martinhal Village Houses and independently owned Luxury Villas (the latter can be booked through the resort) range from one- to three bedrooms, and come complete with washing machines, dishwashers, and private outside space; some have a private swimming pool.

The sizeable fridge comes stocked with complimentary water and essentials (bread, coffee, muffins) to get you started. We were staying in a one-bedroom garden house, which was much more roomy than the name suggests. The private garden area was a boon, especially for parents wanting to make the most of the sun while their child is having an afternoon nap.

At the Hotel Martinhal, the design is similar, but bolstered with bath products by organic company Voya (these are used in the spa, too), free Wi-Fi, soft drinks and water in the mini-bar and Bose ipod docking stations.

CopyRight Hotel Bayard