Makes trendy hipster clientele nostalgic for Ian Schrager’s glory days, when the Royalton and Delano were the apex of cool.
Top Pick!
Everyone from Bill Clinton to Beck has slumbered at this hushed, intimate lux.
Ornate Spanish Colonial Revival with chic interior, city views, and a snazzy-hip restaurant.
Grandiose Victorian-era luxury lodging oozing with objets d’art, leopard carpeting, and the swanky Fifth Floor restaurant.
Based on literary salons of mid-20th century with stacks of leather-bound classics that invoke witty repartee.
Hip, lively musician favorite with celebrity-named bedrooms personally designed by stars themselves.
SF’s first luxury organic hotel with chic furnishings, dreamy bedding, and wicked views of the Embarcadero.
California’s first generation of newly built “green” hotels as decreed by the USGBC (Google it).
Old-school opulence oozed from this 1928 European style landmark swathed in rich royal colors and just a block up from Union Square.
SF’s new ultra-lux 40-story SoMa sensation replete with 24-hour butlers and touch-screen everything.
Built at dawn of Roaring ’20s for California's robber barons and still the king of old-school sophistication.
Neatly appointed rooms with DVD, large desks and free DSL; cable car just outside the front door.
Quaint and cozy, with faded ‘40s charm like Hollywood version of Dickens (Bogart shot the Fat Man here).
San Francisco's Nob Hill landmark that's awash with marble bathrooms, Frette linens, lots of other swish stuff.
This Union Square landmark is so money, they’ve literally been laundering it here since 1938.
Sleekly appointed SoMa hotel has co-opted the concept of yuppie Wonderland.
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