The Top 18 Hotels Near Perrault
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A former mid-century motel becomes a modernist study in restraint, all clean lines and purposeful design where Dallas boutique hotels rarely venture. Graduate by Hilton stakes its claim across from SMU with the kind of understated confidence that suggests the city's design ambitions are finally catching up.
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The three rooms above Duro café on Lower Greenville are less hotel than intimate statement: a small guest house where the owners' devotion to Italian design and detail becomes the decor itself. Staying here means sleeping inside the same aesthetic that animates the restaurant below, a rare alignment of hospitality and conviction.
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A marble-columned lobby anchors this regency-styled hotel on McKinney Avenue, where a daily guacamole service and the House of Krigler perfumery draw as much foot traffic as the rooms themselves. Fearing's Restaurant handles the Southwestern cooking, while Rattlesnake Bar, slung off the lobby, stocks seasonal cocktails and pulls locals eager for a night out without leaving the building.
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A 1925 cotton baron's mansion converted into 143 rooms of uncluttered luxury, where the architecture itself—soaring ceilings, period details, the sense of inhabiting someone else's gilded past—does the work of hospitality. The place trades on restraint rather than spectacle, which is precisely why people mistake it for a private estate.
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A boutique hotel styled after the Provence countryside sits incongruously in Dallas's urban core, all shuttered windows and ochre walls that seem plucked from the Mediterranean. The conceit works because the execution is meticulous—a rare instance of theatrical design serving genuine comfort rather than mere spectacle.
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In the Harwood district, a Swiss-Texan hybrid hotel marries alpine hospitality with Lone Star theatricality, all commanding views and irreverent charm. The rooftop at dusk becomes the place's true center of gravity, where the decor's swagger and the service's precision find their perfect balance.
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Nestled within the French Renaissance pastiche of Crescent Court, this luxury hotel anchors Uptown's most polished corner with a state-of-the-art spa and open-air pool. The Nobu outpost and surrounding high-end shops establish the kind of seamless, insulated elegance that rewards those who never need to leave.
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Perkins + Will's renovation of a century-old William S. Pittman building in Deep Ellum yields a hotel that balances scholarly restraint with genuine warmth, refusing the boutique cliché of exclusivity. The Kimpton ethos—smart, accessible, inclusive—finds its truest expression here, where architectural history and contemporary hospitality coexist without irony.
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A steel-and-glass tower in downtown Dallas channeling New York modernism through a Texan lens—leather and local artwork meet big city views and Texan-made minibar staples. The ninth-floor spa and Michelin-starred Italian restaurant anchor a hotel that treats its details as seriously as its ambition.
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The Adolphus arrives as Beaux Arts theater—walnut-paneled lobbies and tiled grandeur that feel less like a hotel entrance than a stage set for old Dallas money. The French Room under Chef Anthony Dispensa and the rooftop pool suspended above Commerce Street suggest that luxury here means appetite before comfort.
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Canvas Hotel commits itself to local contemporary art with the fervor most properties reserve for thread count and lobby fountains. The result is a canvas in the literal sense—walls curated as seriously as any gallery, corridors that reward lingering.
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A 1929 brick structure in Oak Cliff's Bishop Arts District, restored by Lark Hospitality into a small, luxurious boutique hotel that recalls New England restraint transplanted to Dallas's most vital creative neighborhood. The place trades in quiet elegance—the kind that doesn't announce itself but settles into the room like morning light.
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A low-rise resort sprawled across former ranchland near the airport, where rooms in tan leather and dark walnut overlook golf fairways and three pools. The breadth of amenities—spa, tennis, dining across five venues—suggests this is less a hotel stop than a destination unto itself.
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A restored mid-century courtyard motel trades asphalt for lounge seating and pairs sleek rooms with a lively cantina serving classic Tex-Mex. Two Mules anchors the scene with indoor-outdoor dining while a beer garden and tequila bar nearby sustain the convivial atmosphere.
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Hotel Drover splits the difference between Stockyards nostalgia and modern comfort, its Texan swagger restrained enough to avoid parody. The backyard pool and restaurant 97 West suggest a place where cattle-country lore meets boutique polish.
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Bowie House wraps itself in cowhide and local art, a Fort Worth luxury hotel that reads as though the Auberge Collection learned to speak Texan. The rooms are spectacular; the pool terrace commands the grounds; the kitchen trades in upscale regional fare.