THE AMERICAS

A landscape of contrasts, modernist desert sanctuaries, storied city icons, and coastal escapes with quiet allure. Our Americas edit is defined by atmosphere: places that feel cinematic, deeply considered, and effortlessly distinct.

Each property is selected for its design, discretion, and enduring appeal.

THE STAY EDIT ·

THE STAY EDIT ·



The Scene

The Coast

  • San Ysidro Ranch — Montecito
    Cottages hidden within gardens, fireplaces always lit, and a sense of California that feels both nostalgic and impossibly intact.

  • Rosewood Miramar Beach — Montecito
    Polished, expansive, and designed for ease. It’s where coastal luxury becomes seamless—sunset dinners, oceanfront suites, nothing out of place.

  • Hotel Esencia — Riviera Maya
    Originally a private estate, still carrying that feeling. White walls, dense greenery, and a loyal following that returns quietly, year after year.

  • One&Only Mandarina — Mexico
    Dramatic villas suspended between jungle and ocean. Architectural, immersive, and designed to feel entirely removed.

  • Little Palm Island — Florida Keys
    Arrive by boat or seaplane. No cars, no interruptions—just a carefully preserved sense of escape that feels increasingly rare.

  • Nizuc Resort & Spa — Cancun
    At the edge of the expected—sleek, expansive, and more controlled than its surroundings would suggest.

The Escape

  • Amangiri — Utah
    A study in restraint. Concrete, desert, and silence—where architecture dissolves into landscape and time feels suspended.

  • Amangani — Jackson Hole
    A counterpart to Amangiri—warmer, alpine, and equally composed. Wide views, quiet interiors, and an atmosphere that holds.

  • Explora Patagonia — Chile
    Remote, elemental, and built for immersion. Days defined by landscape, evenings by stillness.

  • Awasi Iguazú — Argentina
    Private villas within dense jungle, each with a dedicated guide. Highly controlled, deeply personal, and intentionally small.

  • Clayoquot Wilderness Lodge — Vancouver Island
    Canvas tents, elevated entirely. Wild terrain paired with an almost obsessive level of detail.

  • Blackberry Farm — Tennessee
    Pastoral, precise, and quietly indulgent. A different kind of luxury—rooted in land, food, and rhythm.

  • The Carlyle, A Rosewood Hotel — New York
    An institution that resists reinvention. The Carlyle remains the address—where old New York lingers in Bemelmans Bar, and discretion is part of the service. Suites feel residential, staff know without asking, and nothing is ever overdone.

  • The Greenwich Hotel — New York
    Robert De Niro’s quietly iconic Tribeca property—layered, textural, and deeply personal. No two rooms alike, a Japanese spa below, and a clientele that prefers understatement over spectacle.

  • Casa Cipriani — New York
    A private club disguised as a hotel. All polished wood, harbor views, and a distinctly European sensibility. It’s less about staying, more about being inside the right room.

  • Chateau Marmont — Los Angeles
    Still the city’s most mythologized address. Dimly lit, deliberately elusive, and unchanged in the ways that matter. You don’t come for perfection—you come for presence.

  • Hotel Bel-Air — Los Angeles
    Secluded, softened, and impossibly controlled. A version of Los Angeles that feels removed from itself—where the pace slows and privacy is absolute.

  • Faena Hotel — Miami Beach
    Maximal, theatrical, and entirely self-aware. Faena is less a hotel than a world—velvet, gold, late nights, and a constant sense of movement.

  • The Surf Club, Four Seasons — Miami
    Restored with precision, this is Miami at its most restrained. High ceilings, quiet pools, and a crowd that prefers legacy over noise.

Members enjoy full access of lists, complemented by preferred rates, private access options, and tailored arrangements.



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The Caribbean