The Top 7 Hotels Near Edo's Squid
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A Beaux Arts palace from 1895 anchors Richmond's arts district with soaring Tiffany-glass ceilings and marble pools once stocked with alligators—a quirk the recent refresh playfully resurrects throughout the interiors. The guest rooms feel residential in their luxury, and the grand rotunda induces the particular awe that only period architecture at full scale can deliver.
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In a restored early twentieth-century apartment building, Shenandoah Mansions wraps itself in folk art and hand-painted tiles that conjure Virginia history with a touch of gothic whimsy. The suites carry regional narratives; downstairs, Ash–Bar and twin cocktail lounges anchor a neighborhood already known for feeding itself well.
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Perched next to Virginia Commonwealth University, this boutique hotel channels the ease of student life through a lens of deliberate refinement, anchored by a tribute to Richmond's tennis legend Arthur Ashe. The design feels collegiate without resorting to school colors, instead cultivating a nostalgia that welcomes both alumni and travelers seeking something warmer than a standard chain.
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A century-old department store in Richmond's arts district now houses a boutique hotel that doubles as a rotating gallery of local artists and makers. The restaurant and bar spotlight regional chefs alongside the building's Italian Renaissance bones, making the place as much a civic gathering spot as a traveler's bed.
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Check-in at Bar Moxy doubles as a cocktail ritual in a lobbying lounge where retro games and late-night energy blur the line between hotel and nightclub. Compact rooms with walk-in showers and a round-the-clock grab-and-go station suggest that Moxy courts travelers who treat lodging as a launching pad, not a refuge.
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A 1914 Colonial Revival townhouse in Richmond's Fan District offers a handful of rooms where high ceilings and antique details coexist with quiet modern comfort. Owners with New York and Puerto Rico hospitality backgrounds deliver a daily European breakfast and the rare quality of genuine attentiveness to place.
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Opened by Rockefeller in 1937 as a counterpoint to Colonial Williamsburg's austere restoration, the inn channels Regency grandeur through columned facades and a lobby that feels more country house than hotel. The Rockefeller Room serves fine dining while guests drift between terraces and the adjacent spa's pools and treatments.