The Top 30 Hotels Near The Gruene Door Restaurant
-
A restored 1906 mansion in New Braunfels houses this luxury boutique inn, where period charm meets contemporary comfort in a setting that feels more like a friend's house than a hotel. Service carries the ease of genuine hospitality—attentive without fuss, professional without pretense.
-
A 121-year-old brewhouse converted into an industrial-chic hotel in San Antonio's revitalized Pearl district, where Roman and Williams' restrained design respects the building's Second Empire bones. The neighborhood pulses with fifteen restaurants, a CIA culinary campus, and weekend markets along the San Antonio River.
-
A former saddlery on the River Walk transformed into a luxury hotel where colonial furnishings and local art meet contemporary ease, drawing both business travelers and leisure guests through its doors. The 17,000-square-foot spa and rooftop pool anchor the experience, while Ostra—the signature restaurant—serves seafood in a space designed to dazzle.
-
A modernist tower overlooking the River Walk channels mid-century design through rugged Texas materials—wood, leather, stone—that ground its sleek aesthetic in local character. The hotel's restaurants, bars, and shops operate with the confidence of a place that understands both its architectural moment and its regional context.
-
The Hotel Valencia Riverwalk rises above El Paseo del Río, positioning guests at the spine of San Antonio's riverside life, steps from the sprawl of El Mercado. It offers an alternative to the familiar chains that dominate the city's hospitality landscape.
-
Three preserved nineteenth-century buildings anchor this sprawling downtown hotel, where garden pathways and a poolside bar create a retreat between the River Walk and Southtown. The daily tea ceremony beneath an ancient Anaqua tree distills what matters here: unhurried rituals in a place built to linger.
-
A contemporary hotel designed by Kelly Wearstler that signals Austin's cosmopolitan turn, all glass and steel angles where local establishments traffic in rustic charm. The lobby lounge and dining spaces carry the unapologetic urbanity of its California siblings, though the city's own character bleeds through the stylish restraint.
-
The Fairmont Austin Gold Experience carves out four private floors within the main hotel, offering a sequestered alternative to standard luxury with its own reception and lounge. From there, guests drift between the pan-global Revue, the wood-fired Garrison, and Latin-inflected Rules & Regs, all anchored in downtown where Austin's vitality unfolds at arm's length.
-
A 1920s mansion on ten acres of urban Austin land, restored by designer Ken Fulk, retains its period glamour while meeting contemporary standards of comfort and service. The Auberge Collection's approach—tasteful restraint over spectacle—defines the estate's particular brand of boutique luxury.
-
The Four Seasons sits at the convergence of Austin's political and tech worlds, its recent renovation having sharpened its appeal beyond the usual luxury-hotel polish. Government officials and venture capitalists alike find themselves in rooms overlooking the Colorado River, where the house-made pastries arrive on schedule.
-
A converted residence in central Austin where the progressive spirit of the city meets deliberate restraint in design and service. The hotel reads less as industry spectacle than as a private home stretched to accommodate guests who arrive expecting something other than what Texas hospitality usually delivers.
-
The soaring glass-and-steel space on South Congress houses a members' club where creative professionals gather over cocktails and kitchen fare, its design a deliberate mirror of Austin's own reinvention. What emerges is less a restaurant than a social infrastructure, one that trades on the premise that hospitality and community are inseparable.
-
A Texas luxury hotel chain finally arrives in Austin with the kind of restraint that suggests confidence rather than desperation for attention. The restraint extends through the rooms and dining spaces, where design choices defer to comfort and a quiet sense of occasion.
-
The Heywood Hotel assembles Austin's creative class—architects, designers, artists—into a handsome mid-century space of polished concrete and Danish furniture. What emerges is less a hotel than a deliberate act of local patronage, where the staff and sourcing reflect a commitment to the community that built it.
-
On Austin's rougher east side, ARRIVE occupies a sleek industrial shell that somehow honors the neighborhood's scrappy creative character without condescension. The dining room trades polish for communal ease, where the city's old spirit and new money sit at the same table.
-
The South Congress Hotel sits comfortably within its neighborhood's bohemian grain, its design by Michael Hsu and MAI Studio amplifying rather than erasing the eccentricity of SoCo. It suggests that Austin's evolution need not abandon the spirit that made it worth paying attention to in the first place.
-
Tucked between South Congress's taco bars and boot shops, Frame Hotel dispenses with front desks and pools in favor of minimalist suites arrayed around a koi pond and fountain. Each room opens onto a wood-lined veranda framed by greenery, a tranquil perch for coffee between the neighborhood's relentless commerce.
-
-
-
The neon sign that has beckoned travelers to South Congress since 1938 now fronts interiors as deliberately nostalgic as the marquee itself. Under Bunkhouse Hotels' stewardship, the Austin Motel joins a constellation of carefully curated lodgings that have remade South Austin's hospitality landscape.
-
Bunkhouse's newest outpost on South Congress, purpose-built from scratch, draws its design language from the 1970s structure that once stood here when Willie Nelson owned the land. The hotel settles into its corner with the ease of something that knows exactly what it is.
-
On the south side of Lady Bird Lake, a raw concrete Brutalist structure with pecan-wood accents and balconied views of the pool sits beside the repurposed Carpenter's Union Hall, honoring Austin's architectural past while asserting something deliberately austere. Bunkhouse Hotels has built a hotel that looks as if it trusts you to find your own beauty in materials left mostly unadorned.
-
The LINE Austin salvages a mid-century motel shell into a design statement, blending modernist bones with industrial surfaces and sly references to Hill Country geology. Architect Michael Hsu and designer Sean Knibb have made stylishness seem inevitable here, right down to the bones.
-
A polished limestone facade on Davis Street announces what Austin's boom has made possible: a boutique hotel that marries metropolitan sophistication with the city's deep music heritage, all marble lobbies and carefully curated nods to its storied songwriting tradition. The rooms themselves are plush and restrained, the kind of place that suggests the city has finally grown into its own mythology.
-
A 32-story mixed-use tower by bKL anchors downtown Austin, its lower floors devoted to Thompson's polished modernism just steps from the East Sixth Street scene. The hotel arrives as the city sheds its eccentric reputation, trading authenticity for the kind of sleek hospitality that travels well.
-
A hotel on East Sixth that channels the neighborhood's restless energy through clean-lined rooms and a diner-turned-kitchen that cooks with more wit than nostalgia. The rooftop bar leans Caribbean, the pool bar does exactly what its name promises, and the whole place feels less like a curated vision than a lived-in argument for pleasure without pretense.
-
A Central East Austin inn named for its founder's grandmother, with cozy singles and soaring loft suites that anchor a neighborhood of century-old businesses. Its restaurant, Siti, channels Southeast Asian precision—Singapore to the Philippines—with the specificity you'd expect from a standalone dining room, not a hotel kitchen.
-
A Greek Revival mansion built in 1910 by Ella Wooten, wife of a University of Texas co-founder, reopened as a boutique hotel steps from campus, its bones unchanged by a century. The place breathes the restraint of someone who knew better than to gild what was already gilded.
-
Near the University of Texas campus, this Autograph Collection hotel wraps itself in Austin's live-music culture through visual flourishes and thoughtful details that feel neither forced nor precious. Four restaurants and bars span from modern American fare to a rooftop lounge, giving the place the feel of a neighborhood hub rather than a corporate waystation.
-
A modernist hotel bar with leather furnishings and Western touches, Moxy Austin-University stakes its claim in the UT district with an indoor-outdoor lounge that draws both students and visiting families. Zombie Taco, its round-the-clock taqueria, offers the kind of casual anchor that makes a hotel feel less like a waystation and more like where locals actually eat.