Haute Tubs

For love of the decadence of a great hotel bathtub. Here, a few of our favorites from around the world

Category:Design
Words by:PRIOR Team
Photography:Sophia van den Hoek
UpdatedFebruary 26, 2021

At home, we bathe to wash off the remains of the day. But on our travels, the sight of a showy hotel bathtub—gracefully claw-footed or sturdily egg-shaped; a copper roll-top or hinoki-wood barrel—is enough to summon our inner sybarite, stirring us to sprinkle the bath with exotic salts and oils while we immerse ourselves with a cocktail (or two). The best kind of hotel soak can also immerse us in a location. That might mean a front-row seat to the Circle of Life while neck-deep in suds at Singita Faru Faru Lodge in Tanzania in an almost hallucinogenic communion with wildlife. Or a corner bathroom high in a skyscraper in buzzing and beeping Honkers. It could also mean a bath at the edge of the earth on the lonely coast of Australia’s windswept King Island in the Tasman Sea at the new Kittawa Lodge. Or it could be a chance to literally be surrounded by the opulence of a palace—as at Paris’ Hotel de Crillon, where the late Karl Lagerfeld commissioned a bathtub out of a gargantuan Carrara marble monolith. Here are a few of our favorite sublime soaking tubs around the world.

Post Ranch Inn, Big Sur, California

Even the non-spiritually inclined will agree that Big Sur is a power spot, with its cliffs overlooking the Pacific exerting a dramatic energy. The designers of Post Ranch Inn made full use of this force, positioning grand tubs with views that seem truly infinite, especially at night, when it feels like you’re floating just beneath the stars. Those staying in the cliffside Ocean Houses can get even closer to them in outdoor soaking tubs, built for two.

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Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur, California. Photo by Kodiak Greenwood.

1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge, New York

Few hotels offer a close encounter with Manhattan’s iconic skyline like the 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge, a sustainably-minded property in the borough’s DUMBO neighborhood. High above the cobblestone streets where local families ply their strollers and the New York Water Taxi docks near the spot made famous by Walt Whitman’s “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry,” the best seats are in the 2,000-square-foot Riverhouse, a two-bedroom, glass-walled suite. You could take in the view from the loft’s hammock, but even more inviting is the chiseled stone bathtub—reminiscent of the city’s granite bedrock—with its unobstructed sight lines of the East River, the Brooklyn Bridge and the gleaming skyscrapers that make up this intoxicating concrete jungle.

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Photo courtesy of 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge in New York.

Hotel Coqui Coqui, Merida, Mexico

The antidote to the busy streets of Mérida, Coqui Coqui is a chic parfumerie-meets-residence housed in a restored 19th-century hacienda that caters to all five senses. That philosophy extends to the guest rooms too, especially in the L'Epicerie suite, where two freestanding bathtubs occupy a colossal bathroom lined in Carrara marble, vintage vanities and plush velvet drapes. Coqui Coqui’s home-grown bath oils are just as transporting, as you might find yourself steaming in an olfactory paradise of rosas frescas, sandalwood, or coconut.

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Hotel Coqui Coqui in Merida, Mexico. Photo by Sophia van den Hoek.

GoldenEye, Jamaica

It was on this estate on Jamaica’s northern coastline that British author Ian Fleming penned James Bond into existence. Today, the two guest rooms within the coconut tree-shaded resort’s Fleming Villa, aptly named 008 and 009, allow you to roll out of bed and into your own tropical garden, complete with an outdoor shower and an emerald claw foot tub. How many times can you lather up with soaps and shampoos made with intoxicating herbs and botanicals—wild ginger, pimento, lemongrass—and bathe under a palm tree? When you have your answer, dry off in a batik robe, walk a few yards to the property's edge and watch the sunset over Oracabessa Bay.

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an emerald claw foot tub in GoldenEye's Fleming Villa. Photo courtesy of Island Outpost.

Hôtel de Crillon, A Rosewood Hotel, Paris

The two Karl Lagerfeld-designed Les Grands Appartements at the legendary Hôtel de Crillon, built by the architect who designed Versailles, are among the most extravagant in the city—the textured grey walls and crystal chandeliers are homages to the Kaiser’s affinity for the Parisian sky and for 18th-century antiques. But the most astonishing flourish can be found in the bathroom: a two-ton bathtub that was carved out of a single block of Carrara marble, with the same wavy Arabescato marble also adorning the mirror, vanity, and walls—entirely appropriate for a home that Marie Antoinette is said to have frequented. Naturally.

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The Lagerfeld Suite, Hôtel de Crillon, Paris. Photo courtesy of Rosewood Hotels & Resorts.

Santa Clara 1728, Lisbon, Portugal

In Lisbon’s old quarter, an 18th-century building has been reimagined by noted local architect Manuel Aires Mateus as a minimalist six-room hotel. With its limestone walls and stairs, high ceilings and pale wood flooring, Santa Clara 1728 exudes a cloistered serenity that extends to the guest rooms. In each of the white-tiled bathrooms, a curvaceous pink limestone bathtub occupies the center; in the afternoons, throw open the glass doors and flood the space with light and fragrance from the property’s garden before sliding into the tub to take your soak.

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Santa Clara 1728 in Lisbon's old quarter. Photo courtesy of Santa Clara 1728.

Zaborin, Hokkaido, Japan

For the skiers chasing the world’s best powder in Niseko, in Japan’s northernmost Hokkaido prefecture, Zaborin offers an aquatic antidote to a long day on piste. An elegant and subtle ryokan with views of Mt. Yotei, Zaborin was inspired by the Zen words for meditation, za-zen (“sitting zen”), za-bo (“to sit, to forget’) and rin (“small forest”). The hotel does, indeed, sit serenely amongst the trees. And a perfect spot for contemplation is in one of the 15 villas’ private onsen, which face the forest and whose water is drawn from Zaborin’s own spring.

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