Seven hotels, seven Italys. A treehouse in South Tyrolean apple orchards and a quartz-stone retreat where the Dolomites begin; a Renaissance palazzo near the Pantheon; a medieval hamlet and a thousand-year-old castle in the hills of Tuscany and Umbria; and two cliffside houses above the Amalfi sea. None of them shout. All of them know exactly what they are.

Architecture that frames the mountain rather than competing with it. Larch, pine and Dolomite stone — nothing in the room that does not need to be there.
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A treehouse hotel in the apple orchards of South Tyrol. Understated, elevated, and quietly extraordinary in every considered detail.
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A Roman palazzo reimagined with restraint. History worn lightly, design worn well — and a design story that reaches all the way to Luca Guadagnino.
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A thirteenth-century hamlet restored as a self-contained estate — organic gardens, a farm-to-table table, and a spa grown, quite literally, from the grounds.
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A thousand-year-old castle on a vast Umbrian estate, rebuilt down to the furniture by one architect. Less a hotel than a working castle that takes a few guests.
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A white modernist hotel stepping down its own cliff to a private beach — handmade Vietri tiles, sea light, and the whole Gulf of Salerno below.
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Zeffirelli’s former cliffside home above Positano, now fourteen suites among terraced gardens. Theatrical, private, and entirely a world apart.
Discover the staySeven hotels. One country. Chosen one stay at a time.