The Top 9 Hotels Near Suculent
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On Passeig de Gràcia steps from Gaudí's Casa Batlló, this hotel wraps luxury around the city's pulse—rooftop pool, spa, and garden offer refuge when you need it. The Banker's Bar keeps the building's vault-and-marble past visible, a playful nod to what stood here before the silk began.
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A discreet entrance on a medieval street opens into a lobby suffused with understated glamour and the signature scent of Ian Schrager's hotel philosophy. The interiors marry classical Barcelona with contemporary minimalism, and the dining and drinking venues carry that same restrained sophistication.
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A restored building that once sheltered Picasso overlooks Port Vell from the Gothic Quarter, its minimalist interiors and rooftop pool offering respite from the medieval streets below. The twenty-eight rooms and suites are outfitted with the kind of understated luxury—freestanding tubs, precise lighting—that rewards those who prefer silence to spectacle.
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The lobby of this grand Eixample landmark—still whispered of as the Ritz—retains its postwar glamour through velvet and marble, a stage where Barcelona's cultural elite continue to convene. Amar Barcelona and a rooftop garden with one of the city's widest vistas anchor a property that treats excess as an art form.
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A converted nineteenth-century cotton guild headquarters on Gran Via, The Cotton House preserves belle époque frescoes and ornate tiles while a suspended spiral staircase anchors designer Lázaro Rosa-Violán's playful modernism. The rooms are spare and contemporary, but it's the outdoor terraces and restaurant that justify lingering in this Marriott Autograph property.
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A 1918 neoclassical palace on Passeig de Gràcia, still family-run, houses a thousand-piece art collection featuring Tàpies and Kapoor alongside recently refreshed interiors that balance classical restraint with contemporary ease. The rooftop pool overlooks the avenue's architectural theater, a vantage from which the city's grand gesture feels like an intimate affair.
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A 44-story modernist tower overlooking Barcelona's waterfront, this Olympic-era landmark pairs floor-to-ceiling views of sea and city with an art collection that rivals small museums. The dining reaches beyond hotel convention—Enoteca Paco Pérez alone justifies the trip, even for non-guests.
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A renovated Sofitel steps from the beach trades Parisian elegance for a brisk coastal mood, white-and-blue rooms opening onto sea views and a rooftop pool. The location bridges waterfront leisure and Gothic Quarter wandering, making it equally suited to lounging or sightseeing.
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A 1908 modernist landmark by Catalan architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner, Hotel Casa Fuster anchors Passeig de Gràcia with black mosaic floors and fluted pillars that frame an unlikely sanctuary amid the city's commercial sprawl. The rooftop terrace offers a drink and small bites against the sweep of Barcelona's skyline, the view itself a kind of architecture.