The Top 44 Hotels Near The Great Oak Steakhouse
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A seven-story oceanfront tower in revitalized Oceanside, Mission Pacific sits directly across from the historic pier, its rooms and common spaces wrapped in California cool minimalism and sea light. The rooftop bar and Valle, a restaurant devoted to Baja cooking, anchor a property that feels less like a resort than a minor city unto itself.
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A modern Hyatt property steps back from Oceanside's main beach to frame the Pacific and historic pier in its lounges and pool deck, salt air drifting through open doors as surfers pass through the bright lobby. The 226 rooms and understated coastal design activate what was once overlooked downtown real estate into a plausible rival for the North County resorts nearby.
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On the shores of Lake San Marcos, this resort distills the nostalgia of a childhood lakehouse—swimming, firelight, quilted nights—while staffing it with housekeeping and the amenities of a luxury boutique hotel. The effect is lakeside refuge without the roughing it.
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An 1888 brick structure—originally a hardware store—anchors Oceanside's quietly flourishing hotel scene with just ten rooms and an architectural particularity that feels almost defiant in coastal California. The Brick Hotel trades scale for presence, the kind of place where the building itself becomes the argument for staying.
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A 327-room resort sprawled across 250 acres of manicured gardens overlooking the Batiquitos Lagoon, with an 18-hole golf course and 15,000-square-foot spa anchoring its offerings. The interiors channel coastal California restraint—calm, spacious, appointed with the kind of understated refinement that doesn't announce itself.
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A modernist resort perched on a bluff between San Diego and Orange County, Alila Marea marries minimalist California design with the kind of quiet luxury that doesn't need to announce itself. Chef Claudette Zepeda's VAGA serves San Diego cuisine to the sound of waves, while the spa and oceanfront pool frame the experience—coastal comfort stripped to its essentials.
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Twenty-five minutes north of San Diego, this sprawling resort offers the seclusion of a country club with the amenities of a luxury hotel, set across gardens and Spanish Colonial structures in the San Pasqual Valley. Championship golf, multiple pools, and four dining venues make departure unnecessary, though nearby breweries and hiking trails beckon.
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A modernist house from 1958 perched above the Encinitas coast, remade into a four-room retreat where each chamber channels one of the four elements through the design philosophy of Rudolf Steiner. Owner Anke Bodack's vision is singular and uncompromising, a place for those seeking something closer to a manifesto than a hotel stay.
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Eucalyptus and roses frame this 1920s hilltop retreat in one of San Diego County's most rarefied enclaves, where croquet lawns and chandeliers speak to a languid, cultivated past. Successive renovations have sharpened its contemporary polish without erasing the unhurried grace that defines the place.
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Forty-nine hacienda-style casitas scatter across a private canyon near Rancho Santa Fe, their hand-painted tiles and garden patios offering refuge from San Diego's coastal crowds. The resort pairs Spanish Colonial romance with contemporary spa and racquet programs, creating a landscape where seclusion feels both rugged and refined.
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Perched 150 feet above the Pacific, this recently renovated resort offers spa treatments inspired by coastal mist and rooms suffused with California light. Its clifftop setting and marine-centered activities draw everyone from staycationers to conference attendees seeking respite.
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Perched on Dana Point cliffs, this resort descends in terraced layers—from the lobby's ocean-mirrored palette through gardens and pools to a private beach club in a 1960s cottage. The restaurants and golf course justify never leaving, though the Pacific sprawls indifferently beyond.
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A sprawling Mediterranean resort perched above San Diego offers golf designed by Tom Fazio, six restaurants, and a full spa alongside four pools with underwater speakers. The marble bathrooms and fireplaced terraces suggest a place engineered for prolonged indulgence rather than surprise.
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Perched on a bluff above Laguna Beach, this arts-and-crafts resort channels the romantic vision of the town's early twentieth-century artists' colony through stone architecture, curated galleries, and garden pathways that descend toward white sand. The lobby bar stages live music and sunset cocktails while fire pits glow across grounds designed as much for wandering as for staying still.
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The hotel sits in Del Mar's refined seaside village just north of La Jolla, where casual elegance meets the Pacific in a way that feels native to Southern California's quieter moments. L'Auberge Del Mar embodies a vision of the coast that privileges understated luxury over the usual beach-town clichés.
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Nestled in canyons above the Pacific Coast Highway, this restored golf-club-turned-hotel preserves Laguna Beach's artistic past while offering spa facilities and outdoor activities across eighty-seven acres. Deer graze the grounds and owls call at dusk—a nature retreat that feels removed from the resort world, even as it courts both relaxation and adventure.
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A new hotel built to resemble a 1920s Arts and Crafts mansion, all tongue-and-groove woodwork and Stickley furnishings, sits on a Torrey Pines cliff above the Pacific. Guests wake to golf course views and guaranteed tee times at an adjacent championship layout, the location's quiet trump card.
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A two-story mid-century motel on the Coast Highway finds new life under Palisociety's stewardship, its bones dusted off and its rooms dressed in a hybrid sensibility that borrows equally from coastal California, Northeastern prep, and European restraint. The result feels neither retro pastiche nor generic refresh—instead, a place that knows what it is and commits to it without apology.
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A twenty-two-room hotel built on the garden-courtyard model of a Laguna Beach from decades past, Casa Laguna trades the boutique pretense of its neighbors for genuine smallness and a breakfast that arrives with its own modest legend. The rooms feel less like inventory and more like invitations to linger in what remains of the town's quieter era.
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A sprawling ten-acre former equestrian estate in La Jolla, wrapped in Spanish colonial buildings and native gardens, now houses spacious guest rooms and a Moroccan-inspired spa. The heated saltwater pool and three dining venues occupy grounds that retain the unhurried character of their 1880s origins.
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A Tuscan village transplanted to the Newport coast, this resort wraps guests in Italian-inspired comfort while Tom Fazio's 36 holes command views of the Pacific and manicured grounds. The circular Coliseum pool ranks among the world's largest; Pelican Grill serves elevated coastal fare while lesser venues peddle pizza and pasta to the fairway crowd.
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A 1933 Spanish colonial hotel remade for the boutique era, La Serena Villas preserves its original architectural character while integrating contemporary comforts throughout its rooms and public spaces. The result is a rare instance of restraint in Palm Springs, where vintage charm and present-day design coexist without competing.
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A Fifties motor lodge reborn for the design-conscious, Sparrows Lodge trades the poolside hustle for horseshoes, campfires, and a red barn that serves dinner after dark. The cocktails are craft, the bathtubs are horse troughs, and the whole enterprise reads as summer camp for adults who've read the right magazines.
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Downtown Palm Springs' Holiday House ditches the usual hierarchy—rooms are simply Good, Better, Best—each appointed with original art and custom textiles by a Hollywood designer who orchestrated the recent restoration. Even the entry tier arrives bright and proportioned, while higher categories add wet bars or mountain-view patios that justify their step up.
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An 11-room adults-only hotel that trades Palm Springs modernism for the casual glamour of 1960s French Riviera, all sunny colors and bohemian details arranged around a charming pool. No restaurant, but the setting—garden, orchard, restorative light—supplies what the kitchen doesn't.
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A midcentury Palm Springs hotel remade by Jonathan Adler swings between whimsy and glamour, its lobby crowded with armor and groovy carpets, its tangerine doors opening onto a seventy-year pedigree stretching back to Gene Autry. The place traffics in permission—to lounge in hammocks at odd hours, to eat eggs Benedict at three in the afternoon, to treat leisure as the whole point.
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A tower above Fashion Island's shopping center, the Pendry trades the OC's strip-mall vernacular for art deco glamour and a resort atmosphere that feels borrowed from somewhere distant. The steakhouse leans California; the pool bar serves Baja-inflected drinks; the whole operation assumes that luxury in Orange County means escape.
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The Royal Sun's tangerine-trimmed facade and angular canopy evoke a scaled-up roadside motel from the sixties, positioned where downtown Palm Springs meets open land. Inside, checkered floors and curved booths frame a sleek bar and restaurant that honors its era without genuflecting to it.
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A mid-century motor lodge stripped of its corporate skin and reborn as something truer to itself, where the roadside vernacular speaks louder than boutique pretense. The motel form—that distinctly American architecture of transience and possibility—finds here its proper dignity.
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Villa Royale preserves the postwar glamour that once drew Hollywood to its quiet corner of Palm Springs, updated without surrender to contemporary luxury. The restaurant and bar remain the gravitational center of a deliberately discreet, adults-only refuge.
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William F. Cody's mid-century masterpiece, once a private haven for Hollywood's A-list, now operates as a hotel under designer Steve Hermann's stewardship with the ease of a place finally living into its purpose. The architecture breathes the languid confidence of Palm Springs' golden era, and the service understands that restraint is luxury.
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A Spanish Revival hotel where Old Hollywood lingers in the courtyards and suites, the Ingleside Inn trades gleaming modernism for the textures of another era. The place wears its Rat Pack inheritance lightly, updated without apology, and feels less like nostalgia than like stepping into a room where the glamour never quite left.
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At the edge of Palm Springs, beneath the San Jacinto mountains, Korakia assembles three houses of different eras and geographies—a 1924 Moroccan villa, a Hellenic addition, a Mediterranean compound—into one deliberately mismatched whole. The result feels less like a resort and more like the accumulated taste of someone who collected places the way others collect art.
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A mid-century motor lodge reborn as a design-conscious refuge where Palm Springs' old-money mystique meets the desert's austere light. The Avalon trades on its provenance—once the Estrella, repository of Hollywood legend—while serving a new generation of Los Angeles escapists who've grown bored with the predictable coast.
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A 24-acre resort perched on a bluff above the Coachella Valley, The Ritz-Carlton Rancho Mirage spent seven years shuttered before reopening in 2014 with half a billion dollars of renewal coursing through its bones. The place commands its hilltop with the assured glamour of a comeback that has something to prove.
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Orli occupies a restored Irving Gill home in La Jolla's village center, its spare rooms and curated library inviting guests to inhabit the space as their own. The contactless service and olive-shaded courtyard suggest less a restaurant than a thoughtfully appointed refuge where drinking and reading unfold at your own pace.
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A minimalist industrial boutique tucked one block from Palm Springs' main corridor, where white stucco geometry yields to vibrant murals and Mexican textiles. Native succulents and handmade fabrics soften the geometric lines in a deliberate break from the area's ubiquitous midcentury mode.
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Kimpton's desert outpost trades exclusivity for accessible style, channeling the brand's mid-century sensibility into an unpretentious retreat that mirrors Palm Springs' own extroverted ease. The result feels less like entering a velvet rope and more like joining a particularly well-appointed house party.
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A modest mid-century refuge with twenty-seven rooms and a playful spirit, Les Cactus sits five minutes from downtown Palm Springs, its pool and fire pit designed for adults who value quiet over spectacle. The price is reasonable for the setting, though dining means a short drive into town.
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A Spanish Colonial retreat from 1936 that once sheltered Hollywood's elite now courts a new generation with restored glamour and careful restraint. The Colony Palms trades on its storied past without nostalgia, offering instead the particular comfort of a place that knows exactly what it is.
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A modernist compound in the Uptown Design District that borrows Palm Springs' architectural lineage without genuflecting to nostalgia, this Palisociety venture translates the group's accessible glamour into a fresh idiom. The result feels rooted in place yet untethered to theme—a hotel that moves beyond the city's familiar aesthetic without abandoning it.
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A French-inspired boutique hotel where black flowers—literal and painted—frame a languorous poolside scene of parasols, fire pits, and mountain views. The speakeasy rosé bar and casitas with terra-cotta floors and midcentury furnishings complete an atmosphere of deliberate, slightly theatrical leisure.
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A 1913 hotel in La Jolla that has absorbed a century of polish without losing its old-world composure, the Grande Colonial sits on Prospect Street as the town transformed around it. Each renovation layered refinement onto its European bones, creating something that feels both timeless and thoroughly present.
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A modernist tower steps back from the Pacific Beach boardwalk with the kind of restrained confidence that makes flash seem provincial. The rooms and public spaces carry a design intelligence that doesn't need to announce itself—the mark of a hotel that understands restraint as its own form of luxury.