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Exploration locale
Belles promenades
Restaurant
Vélo
Sites touristiques à proximité
Shopping de grandes marques
Bateaux à louer
Animaux acceptés
Luxe
Accès handicapés
Adapté aux enfants
Salle de fitness
Élégant
Boutique
Chambres
69 chambres dans cet hôtelRestaurant
Le Peregrine est un restaurant local, situé sur place, spécialisé dans la cuisine américaine et italienne.Animaux acceptés
Les animaux de compagnie reçoivent des friandises et des lits gratuits pour les chiens.Lits bébé disponibles
GratuitSalle de réunion
Restaurants accessibles à pied
Vélos à disposition
Bar
Parking
Peignoirs
Nettoyage de linge
Centre d'affaires
Wifi
Système de musique d'ambiance
Télévision par satellite/câble
Concierge
Accès handicapés
Adapté aux enfants
Salle de fitness
Belles promenades
Vélo
Sites touristiques à proximité
Shopping de grandes marques
Bateaux à louer
This splendidly sleek boutique hotel, named for Bostonian subway system investor Henry Melville Whitney, stands across from a major T station at the foot of charming Beacon Hill, and seamlessly combines a notable 1909 nurses hostel with a new wing completed in 2019.
Publié originellement par The Telegraph
The promise of an entirely new look at a very old city
Publié originellement par CN Traveller
Travel back in time to the America of the Founding Fathers with a trip to Beacon Hill, the Boston neighbourhood where the Whitney hangs its hat. Here, you don’t have to walk very far before you pass buildings, shops and public parks attached to adjectives like ‘first’, ‘oldest’ and ‘original’. The streets themselves look like relics from another time, lit with gas lamps and lined with boxy townhouses in fiery red brick. At nearby Faneuil Hall, none other than Samuel Adams once took the stage to make an independence-urging speech. There’s no doubt about it: this is the old soul of New England, and the Whitney is right at the heart of it. Unlike many of its neighbours, however, the hotel is no museum piece. The influence of the Federal townhouse can be seen in the boxy, red-brick exterior, but open-plan layouts and vast windows ensure the common areas feel fit for 21st-century travellers. Velvet armchairs, leather banquettes and French-oak floors introduce the trappings of fine living to the restaurant and lounge, but there’s no danger of stuffiness or over-formality. In the rooms, chintzy curtains and floral patterns have been eschewed in favour of a restrained palette of dark blue, white and black, allowing the modern artwork to provide the finishing splash of colour. Even the most contemporary pieces riff on Bostonian themes, however, proving the Whitney always has one eye on Beacon Hill’s history, and the other on its bright present.
Publié originellement par Mr and Mrs Smith
Pas de spam. Seulement des mises à jour douces sur les dernières ouvertures d'hôtels et les meilleurs endroits où séjourner.