The Top 43 Hotels Near Ethel’s Creole Kitchen
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A restored nineteenth-century brick mansion in Mount Vernon, the Ivy Hotel wraps travelers in heated limestone and four-poster languor. Its courtyard opens onto Magdalena, where chef Ülfet Ralph's cooking anchors the place in something more than hospitality—a argument for staying put.
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A 1912 Latrobe Building in Mount Vernon now houses Ulysses, a high-design boutique hotel that channels early-twentieth-century glamour filtered through the sensibility of Baltimore native John Waters. The result is a place where architectural restraint meets subtle literary mischief, all dark wood and considered eccentricity.
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In Mount Vernon's cultural heart, Hotel Revival channels the neighborhood's artistic DNA through every corridor and room, a Joie de Vivre property that treats design and curation as seriously as hospitality itself. The Walters Art Museum's proximity feels less like accident than inevitability—a place built to belong among galleries and institutions.
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A gleaming waterfront tower near Inner Harbor, the Four Seasons anchors itself with museum-quality art, floor-to-ceiling views, and a tenth-floor spa that opens onto the city's only waterfront infinity pool. The place functions less as a hotel than as a destination—a controlled, polished retreat where the harbor becomes your private geography.
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A restored 1906 Beaux Arts landmark that once housed B&O Railroad headquarters, this Kimpton property preserves its gilded past through Tiffany fixtures and marble staircases. The hotel trades in the fantasy of a vanished era, though whether that nostalgia justifies the price is another question entirely.
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A century-old pier building overlooking Baltimore's harbor holds this boutique hotel, where poolside lounging and waterfront views arrive as unexpected luxuries in Fell's Point. The neighborhood's density of restaurants and bars makes the Pendry less retreat than anchor, a place to return to after the city's own entertainment.
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A waterfront hotel positioned where Baltimore's Inner Harbor meets the city's skyline, with dark-wood rooms and upper suites that frame the view through generous windows. The rooftop deck and indoor pool create a self-sufficient retreat that charges less than comparable properties while keeping Camden Yards and the Aquarium within easy walking distance.
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The Graduate Annapolis occupies a former chain hotel transformed into a spirited refuge tailored to the Naval Academy town's particular history and character. What emerges is a place of genuine distinction—colorful, thoughtfully appointed, and refreshingly alert to its setting in ways the building's previous life was not.
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The Jefferson's lobby gleams with period furnishings and an arched skylight restored from the 1920s, its rooms appointed with Monticello replicas and Jeffersonian ephemera that feel more curated museum than mere hotel décor. Staff command the hotel's historical narrative with genuine enthusiasm, turning a thoroughly renovated 2009 reopening into something that reads as authentically old-world.
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A 55-room luxury hotel on the C&O Canal where residential style and Wolfgang Puck dining displace the ceremonial grandeur of larger D.C. properties. The library's velvet chairs and rooftop lounge offer refuge from the diplomatic circuit.
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The Dupont Circle Hotel occupies the neighborhood's sole lodging, positioning itself as a contemporary retreat in a district devoted to dining and nightlife rather than monuments. Its bar and restaurant trade in a studied ease—Irish whiskeys, midcentury furnishings, house-made pastries—that feels European without strain.
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Across from the White House in a 1928 Italian Renaissance building, The Hay-Adams trades in discretion and old-world grandeur while remaining thoroughly modern underneath. Its rooftop terrace commands views of the city's monuments and power, a perch where history feels both intimate and distant.
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The St. Regis Washington occupies the corner of power itself, where Palladian windows and Renaissance chandeliers anchor a lobby that has welcomed presidents since 1926. Modern systems nestle beneath the Old World bones, and from here the White House and Metro are equally near.
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An industrial seed factory became this spare, plant-filled boutique hotel in Union Market, where exposed beams and local art meet sustainability-minded design. The rooftop Treehouse bar and breakfast sourced from the adjacent farmers market honor both the building's horticultural past and its present ambitions.
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Herzog & de Meuron's gleaming tower breaks D.C.'s architectural reserve with sleek modernism that feels intentional rather than imposed. Estuary's Chesapeake focus and Summit's rooftop perch—both designed for lingering—suggest the hotel trusts its own spaces more than the city beyond them.
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A spare, minimalist tower in the West End where Tony Chi's neutral palette and custom limestone bathrooms make a 220-room hotel feel almost residential. Blue Duck Tavern downstairs trades in comfort cooking—apple pie especially—while the Tea Cellar upstairs caters to a discerning crowd of guests and locals who know the difference between hospitality and mere service.
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A restored 19th-century post office turned hotel sits grandly on Pennsylvania Avenue, its soaring skylight and period details preserved beneath velvet and marble interiors. The lobby houses a Peacock Alley bar and Sushi Nakazawa, anchoring this Forbes Four Star property favored by executives and diplomats.
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A quarter-century fixture in Georgetown, this 222-room hotel serves the city's most seasoned travelers with the unhurried formality they expect. Bourbon Steak and a well-appointed fitness club complete the picture of traditional luxury calibrated for people accustomed to being recognized.
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The Eaton occupies a stripped-concrete corner tower on K Street with the polish of a luxury hotel and the conviction of a independent operator who refuses convention. Rooms are spare and considered, the lobby pulses with restaurant and bar traffic, and throughout there's a sense that someone with actual taste made every decision.
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A converted incinerator from the turn of the century, all red brick and soaring chimney, now houses modern luxury in the heart of Georgetown between canal and river. The lobby's exposed walls and fireplace ease you into rooms where Frette linens and Potomac views suggest that industrial bones and contemporary comfort need not be at odds.
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A glass-and-brick modernist box in the West End that defies D.C.'s neoclassical pretensions with unhurried, wood-paneled grandeur inside. Frette linens and Asprey bath products signal the familiar Ritz playbook, though the rooms themselves—generous by local measure—feel less like theater than like actual refuge.
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A renovated Georgetown hotel where power brokers and tourists alike find respite in rooms overlooking the capital, with a three-floor wellness center anchored by a fifty-foot saltwater pool. The lobby's geometric ceiling installation and courtyard garden offer quieter moments between the restaurant, bar, and inevitable business meetings.
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A striking modernist tower on the Potomac houses Pendry's Washington outpost, all angular glass and waterfront escapism designed to feel intimate despite its luxury scale. The rooftop Moonraker commands views over the river with a circular bar and geometric swagger; downstairs, Bar Pendry's navy walls and golden palms strike a more restrained note.
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A 19th-century bank in Penn Quarter houses a hotel that treats the city's architectural patrimony as permission to play; the preserved vault and soaring interiors breathe with studied irreverence. Riggs suggests Washington needn't choose between gravitas and wit, between marble solemnity and the small gestures of style that make a place feel alive.
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A converted century-old Adams Morgan church houses a boutique hotel wrapped in bohemian-eclectic design, with restaurants and bars anchoring the neighborhood's dining scene. The LINE DC channels the Los Angeles original's formula of repurposing historic architecture into a culinary destination that transcends typical hotel hospitality.
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A waterfront perch steps from the Mall commands views of both the Monument and Jefferson Memorial, with cherry blossoms doubling the spectacle each spring. Chef Kwame Onwuachi's Dōgon restaurant channels Afro-Caribbean cooking in an immersive dining space that anchors the hotel's transformation.
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A ten-story atrium and commissioned artworks signal architectural ambition rare among Capitol Hill's business hotels, while rooms offer Egyptian cotton and genuine comfort. Bistro du Jour channels modest French classicism, and the Supreme Court sits less than a mile away.
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A mid-century modernist aesthetic balances visual polish with genuine comfort, appealing equally to luxury devotees and boutique seekers. Viceroy Washington DC threads this needle with an eye for what actually matters in a hotel room, avoiding the false choice between style and substance.
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The Watergate's curved facade—designed by Luigi Moretti in 1961 to evoke a sail on the Potomac—remains one of Washington's most recognizable silhouettes. Reopened after a decade away, the hotel pairs its midcentury bones with contemporary comforts, neither revering the past nor abandoning it.
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A twelve-story modernist box sits alongside an 1888 Romanesque Revival façade on a full city block, the old and new declaring their incompatibility without apology. Arlo Washington DC does not reconcile these eras; it simply lets them coexist in uneasy architectural conversation.
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The Kimpton Banneker commands a stark view of the White House from 16th Street, its modernist interior stripped of period affectation or grandeur. Its art collection centers Black creators and thinkers, named for the astronomer—a curatorial choice that refuses the capital's usual historical pageantry.
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Hotel Zena Washington DC wraps itself in feminist statement-making, from the warrior figures guarding its entrance to a vast pointillist portrait of Ruth Bader Ginsburg commanding the lobby lounge. The Viceroy group's renovation of the former Donovan channels the spirit of the 2017 Women's March into a place where ideology and hospitality meet without apology.
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The brand's first Washington outpost settles into Dupont Circle, where nightlife and neighborhood energy matter as much as the business of government. A boutique hotel that privileges scene over formality, arriving two decades after its SoHo debut with the same restless sensibility intact.
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A 1920s Art Deco landmark sits steps from Lafayette Square and the White House, its neoclassical bones visible from the street. The Sofitel trades on proximity and architectural pedigree rather than innovation, which suits the guests who book it for the address alone.
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Yours Truly channels the scrappy optimism of a new-wave boutique hotel—modernist bones warmed by an eclectic, lived-in interior that avoids the cold precision of high-design excess. The result feels less like a curator's vision imposed than a space that accumulated its character organically, which is precisely the point.
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The Hotel Washington arrives near the White House with design swagger and a deliberate disregard for D.C. propriety, its funky interiors and youth-culture references unapologetic about who they're not trying to please. A neighborhood that long needed after-work vitality finally has a place that delivers it.
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The Willard has hosted every president since the 1860s and remains Washington's gathering place for power brokers and dignitaries, its lounges thick with the weight of backroom deals. A grand old hotel where the architecture itself seems to remember every negotiation, every favor owed, every consequence that followed.
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A mid-century-inflected luxury hotel on the waterfront where the Thompson brand's eye for design transcends the typical capital hospitality formula. Studios Architecture and Parts and Labor Design have conjured spaces that feel deliberate and composed rather than merely expensive.
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A modernist hotel steps from Arlington's monuments, where feather beds and Egyptian cotton meet glass and steel overlooking the Potomac. Santé's fireside lounge dispenses Mediterranean cocktails built on seasonal Virginia ingredients—the kind of restful punctuation a business traveler needs.
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A 398-room Ritz-Carlton in McLean's corporate corridor, fifteen minutes from D.C., offering direct access to Tysons Galleria's luxury shops and a forward-thinking spa. The Club floor, wine bar with live music, and upper-floor city views appeal equally to business travelers and weekend escapists.
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A white Colonial manor on the Miles River combines the precision of luxury hospitality with the ease of a country inn, its rooms and grounds reflecting decades of careful stewardship. The place trades in the particular comfort of old money applied thoughtfully—a setting where formality dissolves the moment you arrive.
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A brick-fronted hotel in Old Town Alexandria keeps its rooms spare and composed, a few blocks from the Metro and the Potomac's pull. The actual distinction lies not in amenities but in a staff trained in the older art of making guests feel genuinely attended to.
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Two sisters from Washington have transformed a cluster of nineteenth-century structures into a bayside inn and restaurant, marrying historical fabric with deliberate modern restraint. At Ruse, the kitchen treats local seafood with the same calibrated attention to detail that animates the rooms upstairs.