The Top 12 Hotels Near Aga's Restaurant & Catering
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An independent luxury hotel with a Swarovski chandelier anchoring its lobby and Frank Stella paintings overhead, The Post Oak commands Uptown Houston with unapologetic grandeur and five-hundred-square-foot rooms. The marble bathrooms, on-site spa, two restaurants, and cocktail bar suggest a place less interested in restraint than in the pleasure of abundance.
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A Tuscan-inflected hotel in Uptown Houston where pastel facades and refined interiors conspire to transport without leaving the city limits. The veranda, conservatory, and various dining rooms suggest a private estate scaled up for travelers who prize quiet sophistication over spectacle.
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A sprawling resort compound of 27 wooded acres near Loop 610 offers guests a rare urban sanctuary with a Forbes Four-Star spa, Olympic-caliber fitness facilities, and three pools. The warm interiors and floor-to-ceiling windows frame the forest beyond—a deliberate retreat from the city that nonetheless remains minutes from it.
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The west-side outpost of a Houston institution trades museum-district refinement for accessible luxury, maintaining the brand's sleek architecture and service caliber across a sprawling hotel footprint. ZaZa Memorial City reads as confident without pretense, the kind of place where high-end hospitality doesn't require you to genuflect.
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A thirty-story brick landmark in downtown Houston, the Four Seasons anchors the neighborhood with a lobby grand enough to justify its nickname as the city's living room. Richard Sandoval's Latin restaurant, a Prohibition-era bar, and a spa trafficking in bourbon-laced treatments suggest the hotel knows its audience well.
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The Moran's terrace bar catches the evening light above CityCentre's manicured park, all clean lines and the particular ease of a place built to absorb the overflow of Houston's westward drift. Its pool deck and open grounds suggest less a hotel than a resort—a posture both its strength and its slight remove.
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Montrose's Hotel Saint Augustine spreads across five buildings where burled walnut, red lacquer, and Calacatta Viola meet sculptural furniture and vintage finds in a design scheme that refuses easy categorization. Rooms offer respite from the richness of common spaces, some opening to screened porches that dissolve the boundary between interior and the surrounding trees.
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The lobby announces itself with the confidence of old money and new excess, all marble and dramatic lighting against Main Street's museum-district calm. ZaZa trades the anonymity of chain hotels for a kind of theatrical intimacy, where every surface suggests someone made a deliberate choice.
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The Thompson Houston marries boutique restraint with full-service hotel conveniences, its midcentury rooms overlooking either the city skyline or Buffalo Bayou Park through floor-to-ceiling glass. A rooftop pool anchors the property, while dining ranges from a casual coffee shop to a steakhouse, though the real draw is simply being poolside at one of Houston's largest.
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A hotel on Dallas Street named for Houston's founding matriarch, C. Baldwin channels the spirit of pioneering Texas women through its design—saddle leather, earth tones, rocking chairs framing city views. The suites feel spacious and lived-in rather than sterile, suggesting both elegance and the practical comfort of frontier life.
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A century-old Theater District landmark where the walls display over two hundred works by local Texan artists, The Lancaster channels its creative legacy through spare, classic rooms and a restaurant devoted to American staples. Afternoon tea precedes cocktails in a bar that feels genuinely, not theatrically, old.
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A forty-nine-room refuge in Houston Heights where art and bohemia inflect every corner, from the library-shop stocked with local makers to the Italian kitchen helmed by a chef of note. Hypsi anchors the place—a restaurant that feels less like a hotel amenity and more like the reason to arrive.