The Top 33 Hotels Near Audette
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A Gilded Age mansion converted into a luxury hotel where rooms cycle through Tudor, Georgian, and Renaissance aesthetics, each with a fireplace and views of the Atlantic that stop conversation cold. The two restaurants—the formal Cara and the relaxed Café—draw locals and guests alike for Mediterranean-inflected seafood and coastal cooking that justifies the grandeur surrounding it.
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A 2023 waterfront boutique hotel with harbor views and nautical restraint, positioned between Newport's shopping district and working wharf. Its 21 rooms and restaurant favor curated restraint over mansion-era excess.
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A boutique hotel on Newport's waterfront that channels Jazz Age glamour through a nautical lens, all crisp lines and artistic restraint. Forty 1° North treats eco-consciousness as design philosophy rather than obligation, the kind of place where restraint feels like luxury.
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A former Vanderbilt mansion on a tucked-away Newport street has aged into something rarer than preservation: a place that wears its history lightly while meeting modern comfort without apology. The public rooms remain architecturally intact; the suites move freely between classical and contemporary, each one humbled by the building itself.
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A contemporary hotel wrapped in maritime-industrial style commands Newport's waterfront with oversized windows framing the marina and restrained nautical aesthetics—blue, white, no cuteness. Its restaurant, Giusto, anchors the ground floor with housemade pasta and seafood, while an animated outdoor bar draws the harbor crowd.
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A Victorian mansion in Newport's historic quarter, once home to painter Beatrice Turner, now operates as a sixteen-room boutique hotel where her artwork remains integral to the interiors. Lark Hotels has preserved the house's period character while maintaining the quiet restraint of New England hospitality.
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The Attwater trades Newport's predictable nautical cliché for contemporary furnishings threaded with restrained coastal references—teals and navy blues that feel earned rather than inherited. A small bed-and-breakfast that could transplant to Brooklyn or Portland, yet belongs entirely to this particular stretch of Rhode Island coast.
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A hotel that nods to Newport's Gilded Age without genuflecting to it, Gilded strips the era's excess down to playful reference and ironic wink. Designer Rachel Reider's colorful hand animates trompe l'oeil surfaces and Baroque flourishes, keeping the place lightweight where history might weigh it down.
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The Agassiz Mansion sits alone on a rocky promontory overlooking Narragansett Bay, its isolation and austere beauty unchanged since the Harvard scientist who built it gazed out at the same water. The dining room commands that view still, and the kitchen treats the setting not as mere backdrop but as a reason to cook with restraint and precision.
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The Pell situates itself in Middletown's quieter reach, offering bright, spacious rooms—some with kitchenettes and sweeping balconies—while keeping Newport's summer crush at bay. Its restaurant, The Helmway, grounds itself in New England staples like lobster rolls and fish dip built from local, seasonal sources.
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Narragansett's first boutique hotel trades nautical kitsch for mid-century surf-shack ease, with spacious rooms, a spa, and a rooftop lounge steps from the break. The on-site bistro Chair 5 anchors what feels less like a resort than a grown-up beach house with proper plumbing.
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A sprawling Rhode Island estate where fly fishing and clay shooting give way to cedar soaks and spa treatments, The Preserve stages a collision between wilderness and comfort across 3,500 acres. The accommodations—from polished townhouses to off-grid cabins—share access to an indoor range and trails that refuse to choose between rugged and refined.
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A shingled coastal inn overlooking Quonochontaug Pond since 1899, Weekapaug preserves the unhurried rhythm of old Rhode Island through antique-filled rooms and a private beach. Dinner arrives at the waterfront restaurant after days spent sailing and bird-watching, the whole enterprise resting on a century of New England habit.
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The Downcity district's remaking of itself as a creative haven finds form in Neptune, a fifty-two-room boutique hotel where the city's industrial past meets contemporary design. What emerges is a place that takes Providence's ambitions seriously without the irony that usually attends such ventures.
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A 1922 landmark hotel within walking distance of Brown, RISD, and Providence College, the Graduate occupies the former Biltmore site with collegiate charm woven through every corner. Its downtown location places you steps from galleries, restaurants, and the Rhode Island State House—the building itself a reminder of what this city once was and continues to become.
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The only beachfront hotel on Block Island occupies the kind of New England seaside position that makes you understand why people spend entire summers in one place. Spare rooms and a stripped-down aesthetic suggest the Lark hotel company's familiar formula: comfort without ceremony, views that do the talking.
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A Victorian hotel overlooking marshland in Watch Hill, Ocean House marries gilt-age grandeur with contemporary ease, its restored rooms and public spaces evoking the era when wealthy families summered here. The place still feels like arrival—that particular relief of crossing a threshold into somewhere both storied and genuinely livable.
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Overlooking the Mystic River, this hotel translates the town's maritime past into burnished brass and uncluttered rooms where sailboats drift across your view. A heated pool and landscaped terraces sustain the calm indoors and out, while the seaport's working past remains a short walk away.
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An 1908 Arts and Crafts house on Martha's Vineyard stripped of its period trappings and remade as a modernist gallery, all clean lines and designer furniture overlooking the harbor. The transformation feels less like restoration than reinvention, trading nostalgia for the bracing clarity of contemporary design.
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AutoCamp Cape Cod trades the lobby for open sky, offering luxury tents, modernist tiny houses, and gleaming Airstreams arranged across Cape grounds. Each shelter blurs the line between roughing it and resort comfort, trading urban polish for the particular quiet of waking among trees.
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A coastal inn on Falmouth's quiet edge, The Coonamessett arranges rustic-luxe rooms around private terraces that face still ponds rather than the predictable ocean view. The place trades Cape Cod spectacle for the actual rhythms of the place—bike rides, boat trips to Martha's Vineyard, the kind of morning that asks nothing of you but presence.
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A beaded tapestry announces the tribal aesthetic threading through Mohegan Sun's sprawling tower, where gaming floors give way to dozens of restaurants, a spa, and shops arrayed across three hundred fifty thousand square feet. The glass walls frame New England countryside and the Thames River beyond, making the complex feel less like an escape from the region than an entrance into it.
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A nineteenth-century captain's house on Edgartown's Main Street holds seventeen rooms in proportions that feel less like a hotel than a friend's estate, which is precisely the point. The Vineyard's gatekeeping dissolves here into something warmer: access granted without ceremony.
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In a cluster of restored sea captains' mansions on Kelly Street, Faraway Martha's Vineyard preserves the island's whaling-era grandeur while accommodating contemporary comfort across six interconnected buildings. The place carries nearly two centuries of Edgartown history—the kind of weight that newer resorts only perform.
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An hour from Boston, this castle-like retreat stages a French countryside fantasy with manicured grounds and attentive service that borders on the ceremonial. The 14,000-square-foot spa anchors the experience—heated pools, whirlpools, and guided classes elevate what might otherwise be a standard resort into something more deliberate about restoration.
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A nineteenth-century captain's house on Main Street has been stripped to its bones and rebuilt as a sixteen-room hotel that feels both intimate and assured. Lark Hotels' touch here favors cool restraint over island nostalgia, the kind of place where seclusion matters more than views.
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A Victorian inn on Edgartown's waterfront trades staid New England formality for mid-century modern brightness and French Caribbean warmth, a signature move by the Massachusetts hotel group behind it. The Christopher arrives as something other than the typical Vineyard preserve, irreverent where tradition usually settles in.
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A restored whaling captain's house and a gleaming new wing merge into a contemporary boutique hotel that feels at odds with Martha's Vineyard's old-money restraint. The Sydney announces itself as something more rakish than its surroundings, which is precisely the point.
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A nearly century-old yacht club on Lake Montauk updated for contemporary luxury, where whitewashed timber rooms and comprehensive facilities—pools, beach club, marina—serve old-money dynasties and newcomers alike. Two restaurants anchor the grounds: a wood-fired pizzeria and a seafood-focused fine-dining venue, each precise in its purpose.
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A 96-room hotel at Montauk's end that resists the resort gloss, favoring instead a deliberate quietness—yoga, workshops, and weathered wood suggesting bohemia without performance. Mostrador Marram, the restaurant within, channels Uruguayan chef Fernando Trocca's seafood sensibility into the kind of cooking that tastes like the beach itself.
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A block from the beach in Montauk's unpretentious downtown, this hotel distills the East End's shift from Hamptons polish toward something more casual and lived-in. The place reads as a genuinely relaxed entry point to a destination where restraint now trumps ostentation.
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The Albatross carries three generations of Daunt hospitality in a motel wrapped in shiplap and surf-worn charm, its tapestries and weathered ease conjuring Montauk's easier past. The Bird, their restaurant, has anchored the place for half a century with the unforced freshness of a dive that knows exactly what it is.
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Hero Beach Club remains open through the off-season, when Montauk's summer crowd has fled and the beach town reverts to itself. It avoids the transient glitter of its neighbors, offering something steadier than seasonal spectacle.