The Top 15 Hotels Near Hotel Fauchère
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The Gothic facade of this Milford hotel promises period rusticity, but the interior reveals a cosmopolitan sensibility that refuses the tired trope of rural simplicity. What emerges is a place where Pennsylvania's contradictions—farmland and sophistication, isolation and worldliness—coexist without apology.
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The Rex Hotel sits modest in the Poconos, a ten-room refuge where rustic setting meets urban comfort, drawing city dwellers back to northeastern Pennsylvania's quieter corners. Its small scale and deliberate styling suggest a place that understands what people actually want from a country escape.
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Rank 3. Kenoza Hall
Old-World Continental
An 1880 Victorian on fifty-five acres of Catskills lakefront, now a boutique hotel where modern comfort nods to the building's boarding-house past. The bungalows and cottage scattered across the grounds offer the particular quiet of a place made for staying put.
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A soaring timber lodge in the Poconos where marble interiors and stone fireplaces frame views of forest and sky, with suites offering private heated pools. Dusk brings deer to the lounge windows with clockwork grace, a small theater of wild habit that justifies the grandeur around it.
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A restored pair of houses in the Catskills holds a seventeen-room hotel furnished in austere, considered style, while a modern cidery across the property grounds its pastoral setting in sustainable architecture. The Boarding House trades luxury for restraint, asking you to find elegance in Shaker proportion and the cider house's honest materials.
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A 1905 manor house that survived the Catskills' cyclical booms by never taking itself too seriously, Callicoon Hills traffics in the understated pleasures of an earlier resort era—croquet on the lawn, unhurried meals, the company of people genuinely at ease. The place feels neither nostalgic nor trendy, simply itself across a century of modest refinement.
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In the Catskills, this wellness resort trades New Age severity for a more approachable camp atmosphere, its Quaker-minimal interiors and 230 acres of woodland offering quiet refuge without dogma. The programming here respects the land as much as the guests—a distinction that, across seasons, feels less like hospitality and more like stewardship.
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A sixteen-room lodge on eighty acres of Catskills woodland, where hiking trails and a greenhouse justify the isolation as much as the quiet itself does. The Tavern anchors the property as the gathering point, a bar and dining room where guests and locals meet in the manner of places built to last.
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A working farm in Gardiner transformed into a hushed resort of sixty-five cabins, where the Auberge Collection's expertise in rural luxury meets genuine seclusion. Clay, the on-site restaurant, channels the valley's produce and a catholic wine list into cooking that tastes of where you are.
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A sprawling Somerset County estate—once a Moroccan royal retreat, now a contemporary resort anchored in a 1912 Tudor mansion—pairs agrarian self-sufficiency with polished modernism across dining, lodging, and spa. The whole enterprise, which includes the restaurant Ninety Acres, suggests ambition tempered by restraint, a place built for people who want landscape as much as luxury.
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A 40-room compound in the Hudson Valley where minimalist cabins and a farmhouse converge around communal dining, wellness facilities, and a nine-hole course. The kitchen draws on Mediterranean techniques to honor local produce, and the whole venture reads as architect Taavo Somer's vision of thoughtful retreat made tangible.
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A beautifully restored mid-century motel in the Catskills that wears its retro identity without irony, the Starlite sits at the intersection of nostalgia and genuine hospitality. Its dedication to period authenticity suggests a proprietor who understands that the appeal of such places lies not in kitsch but in the integrity of their original design.
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A former industrial structure repurposed into lodging, the Roundhouse sits at the intersection of Beacon's art-world ascendancy and its gritty waterfront past. The hotel embodies the town's unlikely reinvention—a place to rest between gallery visits and riverside walks.
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A converted mansion in Montclair that channels Greenwich Village glamour through the taste of Bobbi Brown, who pivoted from cosmetics to interior vision with the same architectural certainty she once applied to beauty. The result feels less like a hotel and more like staying in the meticulously considered home of someone who knows exactly what matters.