The Top 9 Hotels Near Good Hot Fish
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A downtown boutique hotel that quietly nods to the Biltmore Estate without taking itself too seriously about it. The rooftop garden bar with Blue Ridge Mountain views is the real draw, and the basement bowling alley and local taps are a solid backup plan. Rooms are industrial-chic with brick, velvet, and a stocked bar cart, which sets the tone. The crowd is creative-class travelers who packed one nice outfit and zero regrets.
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A boutique hotel that's been around forever in a different life, the Foundry is a converted steel mill turned industrial-chic anchor in the Block, a historically Black neighborhood on Asheville's south side. The rooms are genuinely comfortable, the breweries are walkable, and there's a Moog synthesizer museum nearby if you're that kind of person. The real draw is Benne on Eagle, the Appalachian soul food restaurant downstairs.
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That old flatiron building at Asheville's busiest corner has been around forever, housing detectives and dancers before anyone thought to put beds in it. Now it's a 71-room boutique hotel with serious Appalachian Deco character, a hand-operated elevator, and views that actually earn their keep. The wood-fired Italian restaurant downstairs holds a Michelin Green Star, and there's a rooftop bar plus a basement cocktail den doing Prohibition-era drinks.
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Asheville is one of those mountain towns that punches well above its weight, and the Kimpton Arras fits right in. It's a full-on upscale hotel sitting dead-center on Pack Square, with rooms that feel genuinely stylish rather than just expensive. Local art fills the walls, the restaurant does wood-fired pizza and handmade pasta, and District 42 is there when you need a proper cocktail. Think creative-class crowd who actually dressed for dinner.
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A 14-room guest house tucked into a Queen Anne house in Chestnut Hill, a short walk from downtown, Blind Tiger feels more like crashing at a well-connected friend's place than checking into a hotel. Lark Hotels clearly did their homework on Asheville, and the result fits the neighborhood rather than towering over it. Good base for people who want the mountains and the weird art scene without the chain-hotel guilt.
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A boutique hotel that actually earns its name, The Radical sits inside a former warehouse in Asheville's River Arts District, where the brick walls and street art-inspired rooms feel right at home. There's a wood-fired restaurant, a café, and a rooftop bar on-site, which means guests rarely need to wander far. The crowd skews creative and self-congratulatorily outdoorsy, which in Asheville is basically everyone.
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Staying at this Forbes Four Star resort means waking up on 8,000 acres of rolling Blue Ridge Mountain estate, the kind of place where the main house is literally America's largest private residence. The lobby feels like a château living room, all wood paneling and stone fireplaces, and the guests tend to dress like they've earned it. It's grand without being stuffy, which is a harder trick than it sounds.
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A mountain ranch resort sitting on 825 acres right at the edge of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Cataloochee has been around forever but got a serious glow-up in recent years. You get 12 miles of trails, horseback riding, and a restaurant called Switchback where a French-trained chef takes Appalachian classics somewhere unexpected. The crowd here is flannel-and-fleece people who also appreciate a proper dinner.