The Top 69 Hotels Near Maison Nico
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In the upper reaches of a downtown tower, this Four Seasons wraps guests in marble and contemporary art while the Golden Gate Bridge floats in the distance. Orafo, the hotel's ground-floor restaurant, anchors a space designed by the modernists at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill—a place where formality still means something.
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The Battery forgoes the startup swagger of contemporary San Francisco for a darker, more bohemian sensibility, all moody corners and appointed suites that feel like a private refuge. Access requires nomination or a room reservation that confers temporary membership—a gatekeeping that somehow deepens rather than diminishes the appeal.
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A neoclassical insurance tower from 1909 commands half a Nob Hill block, its white stone and fluted columns now framing a hotel where old money meets the financial district's skyline. The Lounge trades neighborhood-inspired cocktails and coastal fare while room service maintains the palatial polish with a nearly invisible hand.
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A Brutalist tower at Battery & Clay wrapped in warm oak and stone, its interiors channeling Ruth Asawa and a century of California design without the fuss of either independence or chain predictability. The TransAmerica Pyramid looms one block away, and the Embarcadero's walkways connect you to the district's circulation without breaking the spell of restraint inside.
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A luxury hotel where deep soaking tubs and floor-to-ceiling city views animate each room, the St. Regis sits steps from the Museum of the African Diaspora and SFMOMA, threading art into its very architecture. The ground-floor restaurant Astra trades in Bay Area seasonality while the bar stages itself as a civilized refuge for cocktails and late hours.
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A glassy tower anchors Union Square with rooms in cool blues and steel, views spanning the city, and a spa offering respite from the streets below. MKT Restaurant serves surf-and-turf from an oak-lined room with Sonoma and Napa wines, positioning the hotel as a polished base for culture-seekers who prefer luxury to wandering.
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A glass-and-steel tower near Union Square houses over five hundred rooms, a heated pool, and Anzu, where California ingredients meet Japanese technique across sushi and cooked plates. Feinstein's downstairs offers cabaret most nights—the hotel's answer to evening entertainment that lands somewhere between lounge and theater.
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Ornate wrought-iron doors with gilded cherubs usher you into a downtown San Francisco landmark where a soaring Garden Court—all marble columns, antique chandeliers, and glass ceiling—serves as both ballroom and dining hall. The 2015 renovation preserved its late-nineteenth-century grandeur while stripping away the stuffiness, leaving a space that feels grand without pretension.
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A waterfront hotel in the Embarcadero where restrained luxury and salvaged materials create rooms that breathe rather than impose. Terrene, its restaurant, pursues the straightforward pleasures of California produce and wine with the kind of confidence that doesn't need to announce itself.
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A modernist tower steps from Union Square, all glass flowers and bronze sculptures framing a third-floor atrium that opens onto the city's pulse. Transit infrastructure and location make it the kind of hotel that disappears into logistics, leaving you free to wander.
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The Palihotel San Francisco occupies the intersection of bohemian heritage and tech-world pragmatism, offering a deliberately unfussy take on luxury in a city that rewards it. Stripped-down rooms and common spaces signal a philosophy that style need not announce itself loudly.
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Built in the aftermath of the 1906 earthquake, this Nob Hill landmark sits where three cable car lines converge, its conservative grandeur untouched by trend. The Fairmont San Francisco remains the sort of old-world luxury hotel that makes excess feel like restraint.
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A century-old hotel wedged between Union Square's clamor and San Francisco's quieter angles, Campton Place announces itself through restraint rather than spectacle. The Taj Group's ownership left the place's essential character intact—wood paneling, measured service, the kind of discretion that reads as intelligence.
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The lobby's ornate plasterwork survives the renovation intact, a reminder that this Powell Street landmark has always known how to hold a room. Starlite, the top-floor bar, trades on its old view of the city's hills and the kind of midcentury glamour that doesn't need to announce itself.
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Hotel Emblem tilts its lobby toward San Francisco's bohemian past with book-stacked corners and Beat-era swagger, though the gesture risks reading as curated nostalgia. Still, the literary-minded cocktail bar and artist-commissioned rooms suggest a place that takes its creative pretensions seriously enough to make them stick.
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A 1926 Spanish Colonial Revival building on the Embarcadero, Harbor Court wears its past as an Army-Navy residence with genuine ease—red brick and maritime colors that feel lived-in rather than curated. The hotel sits across from the Ferry Building in a neighborhood whose actual texture it refuses to sand away.
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A stylish boutique hotel steps west of Union Square, Hotel G occupies prime Geary Street real estate with the kind of design sensibility San Francisco's hotel landscape has largely lacked. The rooms and public spaces carry understated luxury without the self-consciousness that often accompanies it.
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The Hotel Zeppelin leans hard into its rock-and-roll persona, a boutique property that embraces San Francisco's counterculture legacy where most hotels play it safe. Leather, vintage concert imagery, and a deliberately unpolished aesthetic replace the city's typical hotel restraint, making it feel less like lodging than like crashing at a musician's place.
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CitizenM's stripped-down design and round-the-clock restaurant occupy a modest Ellis Street footprint with fast access to Union Square and beyond. The ultra-modern rooms and self-serve ethos appeal to travelers impatient with hotel ceremony and drawn to San Francisco's forward momentum.
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Starwood's first purpose-built W hotel remains a cornerstone of San Francisco's landscape, its early-aughts design still vibrant after two decades. The boutique sensibility that once felt revolutionary to corporate chains now reads as confident restraint.
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A 1923 Spanish Colonial Revival building in downtown San Francisco has been remade with the kind of restrained elegance that rewards close attention. Perkins+Will's 2018 renovation respects the original architecture while introducing a contemporary sensibility that feels earned rather than imposed.
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Axiom Hotel occupies a 1906 post-earthquake building steps from Powell's cable-car turnaround, its high ceilings and marble staircases giving the place an undeniable romantic architecture. The hotel marries that classical San Francisco elegance with modern tech amenities and a location that puts Union Square within walking distance—a formula that works.
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A 1904 flatiron wrapped in Kelly Wearstler's vision of a globe-trotting great aunt, all layered art and collected swagger where no two rooms match. The lobby reads like a well-curated apartment, and Villon downstairs serves seasonal California cooking with the same restless, wandering sensibility.
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Hotel Zetta trades the glossy minimalism of coastal luxury for reclaimed wood, salvaged fixtures, and a playful irreverence shaped by its tech-industry clientele. The result feels less like hospitality theater and more like a San Francisco apartment designed by someone who actually lives here.
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A boutique hotel named for the psychedelic poster artist Alton Kelley, planted improbably at Fisherman's Wharf with bohemian-modernist interiors and a vast vinyl collection that feels less like hospitality theater than genuine counterculture reverence. It's the kind of place that suggests San Francisco's rebellious spirit might yet survive the tourist tide.
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A 1903 boarding house seamlessly disguised as a Pacific Heights mansion, Hotel Drisco offers gilt-edged San Francisco domesticity with views toward the Golden Gate. The recently renovated 43-room property trades plastic key cards for gold tasseled ones and stocks its wine reception with the discretion of old money.
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A former budget motel reimagined through Japanese wabi-sabi principles, this Japantown hotel trades gilt for restraint, its minimalist rooms a quiet counterpoint to the neighborhood's bustling streets. The location itself is the amenity: Michelin-starred Thai next door, Japanese restaurants at every turn, the Kabuki Springs steps away.
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The lodge perches on the Marin Headlands with the Bay Bridge framed like a painting through every window, collapsing the distance between Sausalito's quietude and San Francisco's pull. It's a place that refuses to choose between refuge and access, letting you have both.
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The Presidio's vast wooded landscape—nearly twice Central Park's size—surrounds this 1903 Georgian Revival building, positioning it as a quiet base for hiking trails and views of the Golden Gate Bridge. The hotel's intimacy and location make it a departure from San Francisco's urban density, opening onto redwoods and the Marin Headlands beyond.
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A converted Army barracks perched within the Presidio's wild coastal preserve offers views of the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco skyline from rooms designed with contemporary restraint. The hotel occupies a singular position—metropolitan sophistication at the edge of near-wilderness, where the city's noise yields to forest and bay.
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A Victorian mansion perched on a Sausalito hillside, Casa Madrona trades the glass towers of San Francisco for the quiet geography of Marin County, just beyond the Golden Gate Bridge. The hotel feels less like a cosmopolitan monument and more like a private estate that happens to rent rooms.
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Waters Edge perches on Tiburon's waterfront with a spare, New England restraint unusual for the Bay Area—cream walls and raw timber frame views of San Francisco's skyline and Angel Island across the bay. Sailboats bob at neighboring yacht club moorings outside, a detail that anchors the hotel's sense of removed elegance.
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A century-old hilltop hotel in Berkeley commands views of San Francisco and the Bay, its grand lobby and tennis courts anchoring a sprawling resort that feels built for lingering rather than transit. The rooms are uniformly polished, the pools numerous, and from here the city across the water looks like a postcard you're lucky enough to inhabit.
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Perched on a bluff above Half Moon Bay's fishing harbor, the all-suite Beach House Hotel trades urgency for the rhythm of fog and distant lighthouse calls. Its position between Pacific swells and the Santa Cruz Mountains feels less like escape than permission to stop.
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Half Moon Bay's Ritz-Carlton sits where the Santa Cruz Mountains meet the Pacific, a formal outpost in a town that has resisted development and kept its quiet character. The spectacular coastline thirty minutes south of San Francisco remains the real draw here—a landscape that makes the hotel feel almost incidental to the view.
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Hotel Nia stakes its claim in Menlo Park's business corridor with rooms built for work—smart controls, proper desks, rain showers that actually restore—and a dining room where Porta Blu's Mediterranean cooking feels like an afterthought to the real mission: a bed that doesn't disappoint and coffee from Verve that tastes like someone thought about it.
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citizenM sits at the edge of Meta's campus in a clean-lined room where the bed adjusts by iPad and windows dominate the walls. The 24/7 canteen and co-working living room—wired for people who treat hotels as offices—suggest a place engineered for how Silicon Valley actually lives.
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The lobby of this modernist hotel complex in East Palo Alto settles you into velvet seating and digital art before business or rest. Esc serves coffee and wine casually; Quattro offers California-Italian cooking—pizzas, pastas, salads—with the efficiency of a place built for people in transit.
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A converted warehouse on the east bay flatlands offering loft-style rooms and the kind of efficient anonymity that suits traveling engineers more than wanderers. Ten minutes from Palo Alto, equidistant to three airports, and designed for people who measure distance in drive time rather than neighborhood texture.
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A converted 1950s motor lodge on a quiet Menlo Park street that has shed its neon past for redwood siding and private patios, some shaded by an old California oak. Minimal rooms, a communal breakfast, a fire pit for wine—the restraint itself is the appeal.
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A modernist boutique hotel in Menlo Park that trades the Valley's startup clatter for courtyards and gardens, positioned handily between Stanford and the business parks. Its outdoor lounges catch the California light in the manner of someone who remembers this peninsula was beautiful before the venture capitalists arrived.
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Perched on sixteen manicured acres in Sand Hill Road's epicenter, this resort hotel wraps tech executives in marble bathrooms and mountain views that feel miles from the venture capital offices below. The Sense spa and sprawling pool deck signal that even in Silicon Valley, there exists a place built less for deals than for the forgetting of them.
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The renovation of this 24-room lodge in Marin County offers rare proximity to Point Reyes' wild coastline without the sprawl of the Bay Area creeping into view. Nature dominates here, kept intentionally distant from tourism's usual machinery.
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A twenty-three-room boutique hotel in Palo Alto where a personal chef and concierge attend to every detail, from room service to valet, with nothing left to arrange yourself. The shared living spaces and twenty-four-hour pantry—stocked with local Tin Pot Creamery ice cream—extend the fiction that you're simply staying home.
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A red-brick hotel where rocking chairs outnumber standing desks and old fashioneds arrive in crystal, stubbornly untempted by the startup culture sprawling around it. The Stanford Park holds to an older idea of refuge—one that privileges quiet and a drink properly made over the frantic innovation nearby.
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A 1929 brick building near Stanford wears its collegiate swagger in maximalist guest rooms and a rooftop bar overlooking downtown Palo Alto. Lou and Herbert's, the ground-floor café, serves coffee and cocktails beneath Spanish colonial arches, anchoring the hotel's unapologetic embrace of ornament.
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The El Prado's modest exterior gives way to a contemporary luxury interior that recalls refined European boutique hotels, with guest rooms of particular distinction. It stands as Palo Alto's rare departure from the region's disposable hospitality vernacular.
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A Japanese-inspired hotel in downtown Palo Alto, Nobu opts for the restraint of an urban ryokan rather than the spectacle of its San Francisco counterparts. The tranquil courtyard garden and considered interiors suggest a deliberate step back from the noise, even if you're steps from the shopping district.
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Stanly Ranch spreads across 712 acres of Napa Valley floor with the kind of unhurried luxury that doesn't announce itself—spa, villas, and vineyards arranged as if they'd always belonged there. Bear, the on-site restaurant, keeps faith with the valley's produce and wine list, turning local bounty into something worth the drive alone.
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At the southern edge of Napa, Carneros Resort and Spa breaks from the European pastiche that defines much of wine country with a spare, modern sensibility rooted in American vernacular. The restraint feels almost transgressive in a region of Tuscan villas and Provençal excess.
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A resort built for wine country comfort rather than novelty, where the appeal rests on reliable hospitality and proximity to tasting rooms. The Meritage trades boutique flourish for straightforward amenities in a region that needs little encouragement to seduce visitors.
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The Ameswell Hotel sits within Mountain View's tech corridor, where Google's campus and nearby innovation centers have shaped a clientele drawn to polished design and purposeful comfort. Its meeting spaces and grounds accommodate anything from corporate gatherings to ceremonies, with the efficiency of a venue that understands its audience's appetite for both function and occasion.
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A Victorian estate turned luxury refuge spreads across twenty low-slung buildings on six acres of Sonoma gardens, its nineteenth-century bones preserved while interiors whisper of contemporary ease. The ranch's equestrian past lingers in the design; what matters is how meticulously each room and path asks nothing of you but rest.
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Hidden among Sunnyvale's office parks, Treehouse Hotel opens into a greenhouse lobby and pool ringed with stump tables and record players, a deliberate counterpoint to corporate sterility. The property pitches itself at families and road warriors alike with kid-sized robes and a beer garden, trading polish for a particular kind of playful sincerity.
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A 27-room boutique hotel anchoring Sonoma's central plaza, El Dorado positions itself as an urban alternative to the region's wine-country estates. Its location among galleries and tasting rooms, paired with an in-house restaurant, makes it a practical base for the town's cultural orbit.
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Downtown Napa's reinvention as a wine country destination finds its anchor in Archer Hotel, a boutique property positioned at the convergence of riverfront vitality and restored architecture. The hotel embodies a deliberate integration of local culture—wine tastings, dining, public art—that treats the town itself as an extension of the guest experience.
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The Milliken Creek Inn arrives as a belated signal that Napa itself, long overshadowed by its valley, has become a destination worthy of the name. The inn's existence testifies to a shift—hoteliers gambling on the city's culinary momentum, betting that travelers will linger where chefs have chosen to plant roots.
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The Domain Hotel positions itself as functional transit hub for the Valley's office parks, offering weekday shuttles to Google, Apple, and surrounding campuses within a ten-mile radius. It is a place that knows exactly whom it serves and makes no pretense otherwise.
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The Parker Mansion, an 1870 Victorian now operating as Senza Hotel, trades overt luxury for understated comfort and period character in a 48-room setting. Its northerly perch suits those drawn equally to Yountville's restaurants and Napa's quieter side, with on-site dining and a modest spa rounding out the stay.
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Bardessono channels the austere minimalism of contemporary resort design rather than Napa's lingering Tuscan pastiche, its spare lines and muted palette a deliberate statement against ornament. The hotel's commitment to sustainability—evident in materials, systems, and ethos—reads less as marketing than as philosophical foundation.
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In a town where fine dining clusters like vineyards, North Block Hotel settles into its role as a well-appointed anchor, its kitchen and cellar working in measured harmony. The details matter here: each element, from plate to pour to the spa's quiet logic, reflects a philosophy of restraint rather than spectacle.
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A Victorian mansion in Glen Ellen that announces itself in gilt and gables, then surrenders to Japanese minimalism the moment you cross the threshold. The Gaige House lodges you between two aesthetic worlds—one ornate, one austere—and seems entirely at ease with the contradiction.
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Vintage House anchors a sprawling 22-acre estate that mixes wine country leisure with culinary ambition, its 80 rooms and pool designed for unhurried relaxation. The property houses Italian restaurants under the Chiarello name, a chocolate shop, a wine tasting room, and bocce courts—less a hotel than a small village built for people who want everything within arm's reach.
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A contemporary hotel in San Jose's Santana Row development that signals the city's slow emergence from decades of overlooked status. The interiors are clean and confident, a departure from the chains and aging motor inns that long defined the local landscape.
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On Washington Street in wine country's densest constellation of stars, Hotel Yountville presents itself in clean modernist lines rather than borrowed European pastiche. The architecture announces a region confident enough to celebrate its own materials and methods instead of chasing Old World legitimacy.
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The Estate Yountville houses two distinct hotels—the understated, bungalow-style Vintage House and the more animated Hotel Villagio—anchoring a luxury complex in a town already saturated with fine dining. In Yountville's density of culinary ambition, these properties represent the hospitality infrastructure that lets serious eaters stay put and eat their way through the block.
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A hacienda constructed from reclaimed 19th-century timber by a salt heiress in the 1980s, Rancho Caymus Inn channels Spanish countryside romance without the sprawl of typical wine-country estates. Its modest twenty-six rooms retain an intimacy that larger rivals abandon for grandeur.
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Four nineteenth-century farmhouses clustered around rose gardens in Yountville's restaurant corridor offer French country interiors with bed-and-breakfast warmth. Lavender trades the formality of its storied neighbors for chocolate chip cookies and complimentary wine, a deliberate softening that feels earned.
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Kenwood Inn sits at the measured center of wine country hospitality, neither remote resort nor cloying bed-and-breakfast. Stone buildings and terra-cotta roofs frame a spa courtyard that serves equal parts escape and social anchor for the region's weekend travelers.