There’s a certain sameness to many travelers’ vision of a Caribbean vacation: sun, sand, rinse, repeat. When it comes to hotels, though, there’s a surprising amount of variety to be found. Each of these present a unique vision of Caribbean culture.
LessSet on a hundred acres of jungle hills rising above the Caribbean, Golden Rock is a low-tech, low-fuss form of tropical seclusion. It’s not so much an inn as an aesthete’s playground, a collaboration between the artists Helen and Brice Marden, the providentially named landscape architect Raymond Jungles, and whatever gods are responsible for supplying the unerringly pleasant climate and topography.
BijBlauw is a Willemstad fixture that turns the old “beachy Caribbean resort” trope on its head. There’s still plenty of white-sand waterfront to work with, of course, but the focus centers squarely on the vibe: Pietermaai, the island’s trendy hub and catch-all entertainment district. It’s a best-of-both-worlds scenario, situating resort-style tranquility against a vibrant, walkable urban backdrop.
It only takes a quick glance at the pictures to see that Azulik is something completely different, not just for the purposes of this list, but for any location in the world. Nestled into the Tulum jungle on Mexico’s Caribbean coast, the architecture and design can accurately be described as innovative, and fiercely so — a wellness wonderland that appears to have been sculpted out of the surrounding vegetation.
It’s hard to imagine that when Soho House founder Nick Jones opened his first location in London, he had any idea the concept would take him as far as St. Vincent and the Grenadines. But here we are. Obviously Soho Beach House Canouan isn’t exactly like the original, but what’s remarkable is how much of the Soho House vision survives the translation to thatched roofs, swaying palms, and white sand beaches.
For their first foray into the Caribbean, the high-end Six Senses brand chose the island of Grenada, a place that’s rapidly ascending the luxury destination rankings. The 38-acre property occupies a headland on the quiet south coast, and its low-profile structures are nestled into the rises and falls of the land in a way that affords Six Senses La Sagesse an extraordinary sense of privacy and seclusion.
It’s a whole different side of Jamaica. GoldenEye was Ian Fleming’s estate on the island’s north coast, and the desk in the flagship Fleming Villa is where he sat down to write all fourteen of his James Bond novels. It’s still as casual and low-key as you expect Jamaica to be, but with an undercurrent of colonial-era gentility that most of the island’s other properties can’t hope to match.
All of the Aman resorts strive to create a little self-contained world — this one includes restaurants, pools, bars, a fitness center, and massages and yoga in the new spa pavilion. Much of Turks & Caicos is comprised of protected nature reserve; diving, snorkeling and fishing are first-rate, and for younger traveler’s, the resort’s own Nature Discovery Center offers daily educational programs for kids to learn about the local sea life.
Aruba is the sort of place that’s managed to get by without having to take much notice of the boutique-hotel movement — picture-perfect white sand beaches and an idyllic climate mean there’s little pressure to innovate. But Boardwalk Boutique Hotel is an exception: a vibrant, colorful, eclectic boutique hotel that makes no compromises on location, set as it is amid a coconut grove just a five-minute stroll from Palm Beach.
Saba Rock Resort stands on a tiny speck of an island in the BVI’s North Sound, a location that makes it a popular meeting point for sailors, divers, and all manner of seafarers. The nine-room boutique hotel offers a surprisingly intimate set of accommodations given all the activity at the waterfront and in the restaurant and bar. It’s a private-island experience but a social one, and surprisingly affordable.
In a place like St. Martin the phrase “boutique hotel” is a meaningful one — this sort of high-style, small-scale lodging is by no means common in the Caribbean. Le Martin Boutique Hotel, then, makes a statement, if a subtle one, with its name; in this particular corner of the French West Indies, fans of boutique hospitality and modern, glamorous hotel interiors need look no further.