The Top 19 Hotels Near Matia Kitchen
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A boutique hotel where staff monitor social media to orchestrate small surprises, and rooms arrive stocked with local tea and turndown treats. The attached spa emphasizes organic products, while the French brasserie and marble bar anchor a property devoted to regional sourcing.
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The Empress commands Victoria's Inner Harbour as a National Historic Site has since 1908, its Edwardian grandeur now refreshed through a sweeping renovation that preserved the eccentric spirit of its past. Winston Churchill drank brandy from a teapot here; today guests arrive for the same mixture of theatrical history and genuine luxury.
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A 1907 lodge on Puget Sound restored by Portland hoteliers and an Ace Hotels architect, Captain Whidbey has the whimsy of a Wes Anderson set without the affectation. The rooms and common spaces whisper rather than shout their modernization, letting the original timber bones and water views do the talking.
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The 1927 landmark on West Georgia Street reopened after extensive renovation with a leaner room count, a lobby hung with contemporary Canadian art, and staff attuned to the granular needs of travelers. Pratesi linens and heated floors signal the hotel's recalibration toward discrete luxury, the kind that whispers rather than announces itself.
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A 1939 railway hotel with art deco bones and a renovated copper roof, Fairmont Hotel Vancouver anchors downtown with the kind of unflappable grandeur that survived a century of glass towers around it. The lobby and Notch8 Restaurant reflect that same calculus: heritage detail meets contemporary ease, without apology or strain.
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Paradox Vancouver occupies Arthur Erickson's twisted downtown tower with 147 variously shaped rooms offering floor-to-ceiling city views and leather-trimmed modernist style. A playful luxury hotel that pushes guests toward its lively lounge, nightclub, spa and Chinese restaurant rather than their rooms.
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Within Parq Vancouver's copper-glass towers, this luxury hotel commands a sprawling entertainment complex—casino, spa, restaurants—that renders the surrounding city almost secondary. The 329 rooms are efficiently appointed for business travelers, though the proximity to BC Place and Yaletown's waterfront suggests the developers had leisure guests in mind as well.
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A 1913 heritage building in Vancouver's business core hosts sixty-five idiosyncratically laid-out rooms beneath rotating modern art; the staff moves with the ease of people who know the city. Gotham Steak House anchors the ground floor, and the whole enterprise retains the particularity of independent ownership.
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A European-inflected hotel in downtown Vancouver's commercial spine, all parquet and refined restraint, where a personal concierge and wine merchant tend to guests with old-world attentiveness. The spa and skylighted pool suggest less urgency than the business center's gleaming efficiency, which may explain why it caters equally well to both leisure travelers and those in transit.
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