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Family Resort Moar Gut - A Family Stay

Family Resort Moar Gut - A Family Stay

Between Meadow and Mountain
A Family Stay at Moar Gut

 

written LE MILE

 

Arriving at Moar Gut in Großarl feels like entering a place that revolves around families in a very practical way. The road narrows as the valley opens, mountains rising on either side, and then the buildings appear: timber façades, wide balconies, and pathways connecting the different houses across the ten-hectare area. The entire property is car free, which changes the atmosphere immediately. Children move freely between lawns and courtyards, parents walk without distraction, and best of all, the pace settles immediately.

 
 
Moar Gut Family Resort GROSSARL Yoga mother and daughter photo Moar Gut LE MILE Magazine

Moar Gut Family Resort
Yoga

 
Moar Gut Family Resort GROSSARL suite chimney photo Albrecht Schnabel LE MILE Magazine

Moar Gut Family Resort
Suite with Chimney / seen by Albrecht Schnabel

 
MOAR GUT Family Resort LE MILE Magazine Suite

Moar Gut Family Resort
Suite

 

We arrived with two young children and the usual logistics that come with travelling as a family. Within minutes of check-in, things began to feel lighter. The resort is still family-run by the Kendlbacher family, who transformed what began as a farm in the 1960s into a five-star family nature resort over decades. That background is present in the way the team moves through the space, very attentive, direct, genuinely welcoming. Families are clearly understood here, down to the very smallest detail.
Our suite, one of 46 spread across three interconnected buildings, offered generous space and a clear layout. Wood defines the interior, paired with linen, natural stone, and wide windows opening onto the surrounding landscape. Each suite includes a separate children’s room, which changes the dynamic of a stay with young kids entirely. Evenings become manageable, mornings calmer, and everyone has space to retreat.

 

Food quickly shaped the rhythm of our days, as the resort operates on a full gourmet board basis, allowing meals to structure the experience without requiring constant planning. Breakfast unfolds generously, lunch is fresh and light, afternoons bring cakes and small creations, and evenings present six courses for adults. The children move between their own buffet and our table, choosing dishes that are adapted to their tastes while maintaining quality and freshness.

 
Moar Gut Family Resort GROSSARL spiral staircase photo Albrecht Schnabel LE MILE Magazine

Moar Gut Family Resort
Spiral Staircase / seen by Albrecht Schnabel

 
Moar Gut Family Resort GROSSARL Outdoor photo Albrecht Schnabel LE MILE Magazine

Moar Gut Family Resort
Outdoor View / seen by Albrecht Schnabel

 
 

Much of what is served comes from the resort’s own bio farm, regional producers, and even its own hunting grounds, and ingredients feel clear and precise. Plates arrive carefully arranged, colours balanced, textures considered. There is visible attention in every course, and the kitchen works with confidence. Wine is treated with equal care; Thomas Kendlbacher, a trained sommelier, curates and advises personally. By this, dinner becomes an experience that belongs equally to parents.

While adults linger at the table, the children are usually still active. The Natur-Kinderhof welcomes babies from 30 days old and offers structured childcare throughout the day. Around 1,000 square metres are dedicated to children, designed with wood, wool, and natural materials. There are climbing areas, ateliers, a theatre room, a cinema space, workshops with real tools, and a gaming area for older kids. Our children entered this world with ease and returned with stories of baking, painting, and rehearsing performances.

Outside, the bio farm extends the experience, and horses, cows with calves, alpacas, goats, and a donkey named Benjamin live on the property. Each family can take on a temporary animal sponsorship, including introductions and feeding. Our children are still too young for longer riding sessions, so the pony ride quickly became their highlight, small hands gripping the saddle with full concentration as they circled the paddock. The presence of Icelandic horses and a professional riding hall adds another layer to the connection between children and animals on site.

 
Moar Gut Family Resort GROSSARL Spa photo Moar Gut LE MILE Magazine

Moar Gut Family Resort
Spa

 
Moar Gut Family Resort GROSSARL relaxation room photo Moar Gut LE MILE Magazine

Moar Gut Family Resort
Relaxation Room

 

There is a dedicated Baby Spa offering floating, yoga, and massage sessions guided by trained staff. Infants drift in pure mountain spring water under careful supervision. At the same time, adults have access to a 25-metre outdoor infinity pool, an adults-only sauna world, and quiet relaxation areas. Pools are maintained with drinking-water quality, and sustainability is integrated into daily operations.

The architecture supports the entire concept, because the buildings are connected underground, preserving a village structure above ground. Renovations have been guided by solar energy thinking, local craftsmanship, and natural materials.

 

During our stay, mornings often began with a walk along the Panoramaweg, afternoons included time at the indoor pool, and evenings ended with long dinners while the children were still absorbed in activities. The surrounding Großarltal offers over 250 kilometres of marked hiking trails and access to Austria’s largest national park region, yet much of what we needed was already present within the resort itself.

What defines Moar Gut is the coherence of everything working together. Babies, toddlers, school-aged children, parents, and grandparents share the same environment with ease. The rhythm feels practiced and sincere. For families with young children, finding a place that combines design quality, culinary depth, professional childcare, and emotional warmth is rare. But at Moar Gut, it feels resolved and so we left with children already asking when we would return, and with the certainty that we will.

 

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header image (c) Matthias Warter

nhow Roma - A Roman Stay, From the First Evening On

nhow Roma - A Roman Stay, From the First Evening On

A Roman Stay, From the First Evening On
*
nhow Roma

 

written ALBAN E. SMAJLI

 

Rome reveals itself gradually, especially in the late afternoon, when the light begins to fade and the city shifts into evening. The drive along Corso d’Italia passes apartment buildings with warm windows already lit, cafés pulling in chairs and lowering shutters, traffic moving steadily through the dimming street. The trees of Villa Borghese stand dark against the sky, stretching along the edge of the road. The car slows, luggage is lifted from the trunk, and within a few steps nhow Roma stands directly ahead, its façade illuminated against the evening traffic, marking the beginning of the stay.

 
 
nhow Roma Le Mile Magazine Hotel Review Rome

Lobby and Reception Entrance
(c) Minor Hotels

 
 
nhow Roma Le Mile Magazine Hotel Review Rome

Lobby and Reception Sculptural Art
(c) Minor Hotels

 
nhow Roma Le Mile Magazine Hotel Review Rome

Suite, Lounge Area
(c) Minor Hotels

 

Inside, the lobby is already active, guests checking in, suitcases rolling across the floor, staff moving between desk and entrance. On the walls, classical figures appear in bold reinterpretations, their forms integrated into columns and surfaces that continue along the corridors. Fragments of sculpture and graphic details surface near the lifts and along the way to the rooms, appearing again on different floors in new arrangements. We arrive later than expected, so check-in moves quickly, a key card handed over, brief directions given. In the room, the suitcase is placed by the door just as the phone rings. A small welcome gathering is taking place in one of the hotel’s private suites, spaces set up for intimate get-togethers with their own bar and bartender. The suitcase remains unopened as I head back into the corridor and join the group, the first evening in Rome beginning before the room has even been settled.

 

By the next morning, the breakfast room fills gradually, guests arriving at different times, carrying coffee and small plates of fruit, pastries, and eggs to their tables. Some are still quiet, others already in conversation about the plans for the day.
At one point, a small group of guests begins to sing together, forming an a cappella harmony that spreads across the space. Heads turn, a few people smile, some join in for a line or two, and after a few minutes the singing fades, leaving the room to return to its steady pattern of breakfast and conversation.

 
 
nhow Roma Le Mile Magazine Hotel Review Rome

Room Premium
(c) Minor Hotels

 
 
 

From the hotel entrance, Villa Borghese can be reached within minutes. The path leads past trees and open gravel walkways toward the Galleria Borghese, whose façade appears between the greenery. Inside, painted ceilings and marble sculptures fill the rooms, visitors moving steadily from one gallery to the next. After some time in the museum and the surrounding park, the walk back toward Corso d’Italia follows the same route, the hotel entrance appearing again at the edge of the street.

In the afternoon, we set off in an electric Fiat 500, driving through Rome with the roof open and the engine barely audible. The car moves easily through traffic, passing monuments, residential streets, and small cafés tucked into corners that are easy to miss on foot. The driver talks continuously, pointing out buildings, sharing anecdotes, explaining details that slip by quickly if no one names them. With Facile Tours, the tour lasts around three hours, and by the time we return, many parts of the city have already been seen in sequence, connected through streets, stories, and conversation.

Later, back at the hotel, the lift becomes its own small stage. Inside, a built-in karaoke station invites guests to pick a song while the cabin moves between floors. People laugh, sing a few lines, forget the lyrics, and start again as the numbers above the door light up one by one. The doors open, conversations resume in the hallway, and the evening continues upstairs. Dinner takes us to different places over the course of the stay. At Rosina - Cucina di Casa, the room is arranged like a narrow Roman street, with laundry lines overhead and closely set tables. Plates arrive in large portions, pasta, meat, and vegetables served in quantities that assume no one leaves hungry. When some dishes return half full, the staff laughs and says an Italian mother would insist on finishing everything.

 
 
nhow Roma Le Mile Magazine Hotel Review Rome

Restaurant LUDO
(c) Minor Hotels

 
 

On another evening, we remain at the hotel for dinner at LUDO, nhow Roma’s own restaurant, which is scheduled to open officially in mid-February 2026. The restaurant is already operating in a preview setting, and during dinner the waiter explains the concept behind it: once fully launched, the space will host live music and DJs, turning it into a place where guests come to dine, drink, and spend the evening together. The menu combines Italian and international dishes, from pasta to grilled meats and lighter plates, setting the foundation for a restaurant designed to stay active well beyond dinner hours.

Another night leads into the city to The Appuntamento. The interior is clearly structured, with strong colours, defined shapes, and distinctive tableware chosen to match each course. The design approach connects naturally to the aesthetic direction of nhow Roma, where bold forms and visible details shape the atmosphere throughout the building.

 

Over several days, the hotel becomes more familiar through repetition. Murals catch attention in passing, reflections shift as daylight moves through the lobby and corridors, and conversations with the staff continue from one day to the next. During one of those conversations, the building’s background comes up: it was constructed between 1968 and 1971 on the grounds of a former Vatican convent. The renovation kept the original structure intact, updating the façade with large solar panels that are clearly visible from the street. Standing again on Corso d’Italia, the earlier framework becomes easier to notice within the current design.

On the final morning, Rome begins as it did on the first, with traffic along Corso d’Italia and early light settling across the façades. The Spanish Steps are still only a short walk away, reachable within fifteen minutes through streets that have already become familiar over the past days. There is time for one more coffee, one more slow walk through Villa Borghese, one more look back at the hotel entrance before stepping into the city again. What remains are the days themselves, marked by rooms returned to at night, streets crossed in the afternoon, and tables shared in the evening.

 


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all images (c) Minor Hotels

Vila Vita Parc Algarve - Art, Village Life & Luxury by the Sea

Vila Vita Parc Algarve - Art, Village Life & Luxury by the Sea

The Art of Village Life
Why Vila Vita Parc is Portugal’s Most Stylish Community

 

written LAURA DUNKELMANN

 

Forget the concept of a "resort" for a moment. The word often suggests lobbies, room numbers, and anonymity. Vila Vita Parc, perched on the dramatic rocky coast of the Algarve, plays in a different league. It isn’t a hotel block—it is a village. But not just any village; it is arguably Europe’s most curated, aesthetic, and relaxed microcosm. It is the "Luxury Edition" of Portuguese country life.

 
 
Vila Vita Parc Portugal vila terrace LE MILE Magazine

Vila Vita Parc
Terrace

 
Vila Vita Parc Oasis LE MILE Magazine

Vila Vita Parc
Oasis

 
Vila Vita Parc SUITE LE MILE Magazine

Vila Vita Parc
Suite

 

Checking in here means becoming part of a temporary community. You don’t just stay; you reside in an organically grown ecosystem. The architecture proudly cites the region’s Moorish heritage: blinding white walls, terracotta roofs, and the Algarve’s signature ornate chimneys. You stroll across authentic Calçada Portuguesa (cobblestones), past intimate piazzas and splashing fountains. It has everything a functioning municipality needs—from the local wine merchant (a spectacular cellar deep underground) to the "village baker" (world-class pâtisserie). You nod to neighbors on the winding paths. You belong.

However, what distinguishes Vila Vita Parc from a mere luxury retreat is its soul—and that soul is artistic. The immense tropical gardens that weave through the estate are not just scenery; they form an open-air museum. Everywhere, amidst palms, hibiscus, and the deep blue of the Atlantic, art emerges.

 

It is a constant journey of discovery: contemporary masterpieces, such as the striking works by Arne Quinze, stand in dialogue with the wild nature of the cliffs. The art here isn't locked behind glass cases; it is part of daily life. It stands beside the pool, watches over the path to the spa, or hides in the lush greenery. This curated approach gives the resort an intellectual depth rarely found in the Algarve.

 
 
Vila Vita Parc sunset LE MILE Magazine

Vila Vita Parc
Sunset at Beach

 
 

True luxury today implies responsibility, and this village takes care of its surroundings. With its own farm, Herdade dos Grous, ensuring a genuine farm-to-table experience, and a dedicated desalination plant to preserve local water resources, the resort operates in deep harmony with nature. This commitment extends to the local fauna as well, through active partnerships with conservation groups like RIAS to rehabilitate wildlife and protect the ocean’s biodiversity.

Despite the two Michelin stars at the "Ocean" restaurant and the flawless service, nothing feels stiff here. This is due to its deep roots in Portuguese culture. Traditional Azulejos (colorful tiles) add splashes of color and history throughout. The hospitality is warm, almost familial—typical of a village community that is proud of its home.

 
Arne Quinze green lupine final Vila Vita Portugal LE MILE Magazine

Vila Vita Parc
Green lupine by Arne Quinze

 
Arne Quinze fountain lupine final Vila Vita Portugal LE MILE Magazine

Vila Vita Parc
Fountain lupine by Arne Quinze

 
 
 

Vila Vita Parc manages the feat of offering world-class luxury while feeling as authentic as a walk through an old fishing hamlet. It is a place for aesthetes who want to experience, not just consume. At the end of your stay, you don’t feel like you’re checking out of a hotel, but rather moving away from a beloved neighborhood. And in your mind, you’re already planning your return to this artful village by the sea.

 

New Year in Lugano - Holiday Season Guide 2025

New Year in Lugano - Holiday Season Guide 2025

New Year in Lugano
How Lugano Sets the Tone for the 2026

 

written SARAH ARENDTS

 

The days leading into the new year often carry a quiet expectation. People look for places that allow them to reset, to shift into the next chapter with intention. In Lugano, the hotels of the DOT Lifestyle Collection create exactly that kind of environment. Each property approaches hospitality from a different angle, yet they share a sense of ease and clarity that feels right for the holiday season. Their locations above and around the lake give guests an immediate connection to light, stillness, and the rhythm of the city in winter.

 
LE MILE Magazine Villa Principe Leopoldo New Years Eve Lago di Lugano

Villa Principe Leopoldo
Lago di Lugano

 
LE MILE Magazine Villa Principe Leopoldo New Years Eve Lago di Lugano

Villa Principe Leopoldo
Lago di Lugano

 
LE MILE Magazine Villa Principe Leopoldo New Years Eve Lago di Lugano

Villa Principe Leopoldo
Lago di Lugano

 

Villa Principe Leopoldo has a presence shaped by its history and by its position overlooking Lake Lugano. The building once served as a private residence; today it offers a setting where the final days of the year feel spacious and grounded. Guests arrive to a house that moves at its own pace. The team focuses on creating an atmosphere that supports long dinners, conversations that extend into the evening, and mornings that unfold gradually. New Year’s Eve here is structured around time spent together at the table. The kitchen develops a menu that reflects Italian technique and local ingredients, and the evening becomes a sequence of moments. On New Year’s Day, breakfast on the terrace or in one of the salons sets a calm tone for the year ahead.

Higher up in the hills, the Kurhaus Cademario offers a different rhythm. The property is known for its wellness focus, and it becomes especially relevant in late December when people look for quiet and clarity. The indoor and outdoor spa areas create long stretches of time where guests can detach from the usual pace. The view across the valley and the lake adds to that sense of distance from daily life. Dinner on New Year’s Eve follows a refined but understated approach. The cooking centers on regional products, seasonal flavors, and a style that feels aligned with the house’s emphasis on balance. For guests who want to start the year with intention rather than intensity, the Kurhaus becomes a fitting choice.

 

Back in Lugano, the Villa Sassa sits closer to the center and carries a more urban energy. The hotel brings together people who want movement, light, and a social environment while still staying within a relaxed setting. Evenings here often stretch into small gatherings at the bar or on the terrace when weather allows. For the holiday season, the atmosphere becomes slightly more festive without losing its sense of ease. New Year’s Eve is lively, shaped by music and a more dynamic dinner service. On the first morning of the year, the long brunch with a view of the lake gives the experience a calm finish.

 
LE MILE Magazine Villa Principe Leopoldo New Years Eve Lago di Lugano painting of a dancing couple
 
LE MILE Magazine Villa Principe Leopoldo New Years Eve Lago di Lugano

Villa Principe Leopoldo
Lago di Lugano

 
LE MILE Magazine Villa Principe Leopoldo New Years Eve Lago di Lugano

Villa Principe Leopoldo
Lago di Lugano

 

Taken together, the three hotels form a clear recommendation for anyone planning the holiday season or the transition into the new year. Villa Principe Leopoldo for presence and elegance, Kurhaus Cademario for quiet restoration, and Villa Sassa for a more social and energetic stay. Lugano in winter has a specific charm, and the DOT Lifestyle Collection offers three distinct ways to experience it—with time, space, and attention to detail. Enjoy!


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Wellnesshotel Wittelsbach - A Steady Wellness Stay

Wellnesshotel Wittelsbach - A Steady Wellness Stay

.culture vulture
Days of Quiet Rhythm in the Sky Spa
at Wellnesshotel Wittelsbach

 

written ALBAN E. SMAJLI

 

The arrival in Bad Füssing forms a particular first impression, because the town consists mainly of hotels and wellness facilities, and the atmosphere settles once the entrance of Wellnesshotel Wittelsbach comes into view with its fresh interior and the sense that the stay can unfold entirely inside this building.

 

The lobby opens with warm colors, soft materials and a balanced light that eases the transition from the road into the steady rhythm of the hotel. Our experience took place in autumn during bright days, and the sunlight shaped the interior in a way that made every surface feel warm and calm, especially because the colors and textures supported long stretches of rest without distraction. The room contained thoughtful furniture, and we settled into it quickly because it felt immediately comfortable.

 
Hotel Wittelsbach Review Bad Füssing Alex Filz Hotel Room LE MILE Magazine

Hotel Wittelsbach
Interior Design, Superior Room seen by Alex Filz

 
Hotel Wittelsbach Review Bad Füssing Alex Filz Hotel Room LE MILE Magazine

Hotel Wittelsbach
Interior Design, Superior Room seen by Alex Filz

 
Hotel Wittelsbach Review Bad Füssing Alex Filz Lobby LE MILE Magazine

Hotel Wittelsbach
Lobby seen by Alex Filz

 

The Sky Spa forms the center of the entire experience, and the placement on the highest level of the building creates a feeling of being slightly lifted above the town. The saunas, the quiet zones and the view toward the Alps form a setting that encourages slow movement and long pauses. One evening stands out with particular clarity, because the moon appeared in a size and brightness that felt rare, and the moment after sunset when we stepped into the relaxation area showed the landscape in a very steady alignment of mountains, sky and soft light. The warmth of the sauna, the cool evening air on the terrace and the quiet inside the room formed a sequence that shaped the entire night. The indoor thermal pool on the ground floor carries the warm regional water in a way that supports quiet floating and slow swimming, while the outdoor pool creates a refreshing shift when the air turns cooler. The massage area offers full body treatments, ayurveda sessions and various options for guests who want a deeper form of rest, and the atmosphere inside the cabins remains consistent with the calm design language found throughout the spa.

 

The days follow a gentle structure, and the hotel supports this with a clear culinary rhythm. Breakfast includes a wide selection with regional influences, and the dining room maintains a balanced tone through warm colors and soft materials. In the evening, dinner unfolds with a buffet for the starters, and guests create their own beginning to the meal before choosing a main course from the menu, which includes dishes built around fish, meat or vegan options. The combination feels flexible and easy, and the thoughtful preparation gives the meals a steady continuity throughout the stay. Desserts arrive with a calm sense of order, and the wines available at dinner support the courses without drawing attention away from the relaxed atmosphere. During the afternoon, the café O´Lala offers pastries and small dishes from the in-house patisserie, which creates a small moment of indulgence within the daily flow of spa and rest.

 
Hotel Wittelsbach Review Bad Füssing Alex Filz Sky Spa Sauna LE MILE Magazine

Hotel Wittelsbach
Sky Sauna seen by Alex Filz

 
Hotel Wittelsbach Review Bad Füssing Alex Filz Spa Sauna LE MILE Magazine

Hotel Wittelsbach
Steam Sauna seen by Alex Filz

 
Hotel Wittelsbach Review Bad Füssing Alex Filz Restaurant LE MILE Magazine

Hotel Wittelsbach
Restaurant seen by Alex Filz

 

Bad Füssing carries a particular character, because the town stands almost entirely on wellness traditions, and this influences the surroundings through quiet streets, open paths and a slow pace. At first, this setting feels unusual, and the Wellnesshotel Wittelsbach benefits from this through its complete offering inside the building, which creates an environment where every part of the day unfolds within walking distance and without planning. Walks around the area follow flat routes through small parks and calm streets, and bicycles extend the reach toward the fields and wider landscapes. The hotel’s design brings a sense of clarity into this environment, and the atmosphere inside the property remains steady from morning to night.

 

The overall experience at Wellnesshotel Wittelsbach grows from the alignment of architecture, thermal tradition and a comprehensive wellness program that fills each day with quiet presence. The Sky Sauna shapes this rhythm with its broad views and warm interiors, while the pools, the treatments and the resting zones hold the pace throughout the building. The rooms provide space for slowing down, and the culinary structure supports the day with a clear and gentle sequence. Our stay carried a personal sense of ease, and the brightness of the season, the calm water, the thoughtful meals and the view toward the mountains created a continuous flow of rest that stayed with us long after leaving.

 

Hofgut Hafnerleiten - A Calm Retreat Story

Hofgut Hafnerleiten - A Calm Retreat Story

.culture vulture
Architecture, Landscape and Rest
at Hofgut Hafnerleiten

 

written ALBAN E. SMAJLI

 

The arrival at Hofgut Hafnerleiten creates a steady shift in atmosphere, because the property sits within a wide landscape that gives every structure generous space and a clear relationship to its surroundings.

 

The road from Bad Birnbach passes open fields and forest edges, and the entrance to the Hofgut introduces a calm rhythm that shapes the entire experience from the very beginning. The first steps through the Brunnenhaus lead into the courtyard, and this small transition helps guests enter the mindset that the location invites.

 
Hofgut Hafnerleiten Baumhaus Hafnerleiten photo Julian Garuzzi  LE MILE Magazine

Hofgut Hafnerleiten
Baumhaus seen by Joschija Bauer

 
Hofgut Hafnerleiten Haus am Feld Hofgut Hafnerleiten photo Joschija Bauer LE MILE Magazine

Hofgut Hafnerleiten
Haus am Feld seen by Joschija Bauer

 
Hofgut Hafnerleiten Sauna am See Hofgut Hafnerleiten photo Joschija Bauer LE MILE Magazine

Hofgut Hafnerleiten
Sauna seen by Joschija Bauer

 

During our visit, we stayed in the Wiesenhaus, which features a planted roof, a large window front, a fireplace and a private sauna. The house stands slightly raised above a meadow, and this setting creates a very steady sense of privacy throughout the day. The interior supports long stretches of rest, because the living area flows naturally into the outdoor view and into the warm zones around the sauna and the fire. The days unfolded in autumn, marked by continuous rain and low temperatures, and the Wiesenhaus offered an environment that allowed long hours of reading, thinking and quiet activities without any pressure to leave the house. The absence of a television strengthened this quality, because the interior stayed free from digital noise and encouraged an unhurried rhythm.

The structure of the day at the Hofgut follows a gentle sequence. In the morning, the team delivers a breakfast basket directly to the house, and the selection inside the basket forms a balanced and refreshing start to the day. During the afternoon, the property remains peaceful, and guests move between their themed houses, the wellness cubes and the surrounding paths. At six in the evening, the team hosts an aperitif in the courtyard, and this moment allows short conversations with other guests and introduces the evening with an easy sense of togetherness.

 

Dinner happens either in the GenussHOF at one long communal table, where guests share the evening in a relaxed and open setting, or inside the individual houses for those who prefer a fully private atmosphere. The kitchen team cooks with a very clear focus on seasonal ingredients, and every course arrives with thoughtful combinations that highlight the quality of the produce. The meals follow a steady rhythm with a warm starter, a carefully prepared main dish and a dessert that completes the sequence with balance and precision. The flavors feel clean and direct, and the presentation reflects the same calm and confident approach found throughout the property. The team presented each course with steady precision, and the structure of the menu created an experience that carried a quiet sense of care. The atmosphere inside the Wiesenhaus shaped every dinner in a consistently pleasant way, because the food aligned beautifully with the calm interior and the view into the garden. During dinner, we enjoyed the Iphöfer Kronsberg Scheurebe from the Brennfleck winery, which complemented the menu with a fresh and balanced profile.

 
Hofgut Hafnerleiten Baumhaus Inside Hafnerleiten photo Mona Ortner LE MILE Magazine

Hofgut Hafnerleiten
Baumhaus seen by Mona Ortner

 
Hofgut Hafnerleiten Wiesenhaus Sauna Hafnerleiten photo Mona Ortner  LE MILE Magazine

Hofgut Hafnerleiten
Wiesenhaus Sauna seen by Mona Ortner

 
Hofgut Hafnerleiten Wiesenhaus Hafnerleiten photo Mona Ortner LE MILE Magazine

Hofgut Hafnerleiten
Wiesenhaus seen by Mona Ortner

 

The surroundings of the Hofgut include forest paths, meadows and a quiet rural setting that encourages long walks without planning. The proximity to nature becomes part of the day in a steady and unobtrusive way. The Hofgut’s four cats appear at various moments with an easy familiarity, and these small encounters create warm moments without seeking attention. The staff maintains a consistently friendly presence, and each interaction carries a clarity that shapes the relaxed rhythm of the place.
The overall experience at Hofgut Hafnerleiten comes from a combination of architecture, landscape and hospitality that work together without excess or distraction. The themed houses, the culinary structure, the spacious grounds and the calm rhythm create a stay that supports rest, presence and personal focus in a very steady way.


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The Charles Hotel - A Munich Story

The Charles Hotel - A Munich Story

.culture vulture
THE CHARLES HOTEL
*Rooms of Art, Gardens of Light

 

written ALBAN E. SMAJLI

 

Munich in late light, the park leaning against the city like a velvet cushion, and in the middle of that green hush stands The Charles Hotel, big shouldered yet strangely gentle, all windows and reflections, with rooms that look across trees that refuse to bow to glass and steel.

 

You arrive, and it feels less like checking into a hotel and more like slipping into a frame already painted, the old botanical garden at your feet, the towers of the city humming somewhere behind, the soundtrack softened by leaves. The thing about staying here is that you start walking and suddenly the city is yours. Five minutes to Königsplatz, a drift down to Marienplatz, a shortcut into museums and markets, all by foot, as if Munich has been tailored to your pace. Yet when you turn back, when you push open the doors again, you’re greeted by the stillness of a park. It’s an odd and satisfying trick—the ability to hold pulse and pause in the same space.

 
LE MILE Magazine The Charles Hotel The Charles Hotel Monforte suite study

Rocco Forte Hotels
The Charles Hotel, Monforte Royal Suite

 
LE MILE Magazine The Charles Hotel The Charles Hotel Monforte Suite study room

Rocco Forte Hotels
The Charles Hotel, Monforte Royal Suite

 

Inside, it unravels in layers. The spa first, an entire floor given over to water and steam and that pool—long, luminous, unapologetically generous. Munich rarely gives you this. You float, and the ceiling seems to rise with every stroke, a cathedral of chlorinated air. Saunas, treatments, therapists who seem to know where the tension hides before you’ve even said a word. It is a sanctuary disguised as a hotel amenity.

Then the interiors you notice them before you even try. Furniture that insists on being touched, wood that looks like it could still whisper, velvet that soaks up the light, patterns that converse. Someone here has a hand for colour and a memory for detail. Olga Polizzi’s design eye, precise and idiosyncratic, lives in the upholstery, in the rhythm of the corridors, in the way each suite is its own little manifesto.

 

And then the art, everywhere, quietly, loudly, unashamedly: paintings, photographs, sculptures, even prints tucked into the suites, waiting on side tables like letters from someone you admire. It feels curated not in the stiff museum way but in the sense of a friend with impeccable taste who fills their home with things you secretly wish were yours. Contemporary, bold, and varied. A hotel that collects art not to live with it.

The Charles opened in 2007, a child of Berlin architects Hilmer & Sattler and Albrecht, a modern gesture standing by nineteenth-century gardens. The building has already won its share of awards for stone and form, but what lingers is atmosphere. One hundred and sixty rooms, suites that open to balconies and light, bathrooms with heated floors and long baths that want you to linger until you prune. At the very top, the Monforte Royal Suite, a sundeck lifted above Munich, a stage for morning espresso or midnight wine.

 
LE MILE Magazine The Charles Hotel RFH The Charles Hotel New Lobby

Rocco Forte Hotels
The Charles Hotel, Lobby

 
LE MILE Magazine The Charles Hotel Monforte Suite

Rocco Forte Hotels
The Charles Hotel, Monforte Royal Suite

 

None of this stands alone. The Charles is part of the Rocco Forte constellation, a family of hotels scattered across Europe—Sicily, London, Rome, Palermo, Florence, Brussels, Edinburgh—each one stitched into its city with personality, each one guided by the same family hand. Founded in 1996 by Sir Rocco Forte and his sister Olga Polizzi, the group has built a reputation less on empire and more on intimacy, places that feel designed not produced, hotels that wear their locations like bespoke suits. The Charles carries that ethos in Munich, central yet calm, crafted yet lived-in, a hotel that belongs here. Enjoy yourself!


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A Trilogy of Sanctuary in Dubai and Abu Dhabi

A Trilogy of Sanctuary in Dubai and Abu Dhabi

.culture vulture
ANANTARA Dubai

*A Trilogy of Sanctuary in Dubai + Abu Dhabi

 

Three locations, each an assertion of presence. Anantara is a series of spaces where design, texture, and stillness hold weight.

 

Every structure absorbs its surroundings, channeling them into a physical language of light, shadow, and material. From the shifting tides of Palm Jumeirah to the concealed solitude of the World Islands and the sharp precision of Abu Dhabi’s coastline, these spaces occupy their landscapes without hesitation.

The Palm unfolds, an engineered silhouette on water. Anantara The Palm Dubai Resort emerges from it, a sequence of overwater villas hovering above the Arabian Gulf. Lagoon-access rooms dissolve the separation between built and natural, leading directly into stillness. Mekong orchestrates flavors in precise balance—chili, tamarind, lemongrass, each note exact. The Beach House moves with the tide, a rhythm of salt air and slow conversation. The infinity pool holds its place in the horizon, a reflective line of movement. The Anantara Spa shifts perception through Hammam rituals, gemstone steam rooms, and Ayurvedic recalibration.

 
LE MILE Magazine Anantara Hotels Dubai_Anantara_The_Palm_Dubai_Resort_One_Bedroom_Over_Water_Villa_Seating_Area © Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

Anantara The Palm Dubai Resort
© Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

 
LE MILE Magazine Anantara Hotels Dubai Anantara World_Islands_Dubai_Resort_Guest_Room_Junior_Beach_Access Suite Living Area © Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

Anantara World Islands Dubai Resort
© Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

 
 
Anantara World Islands Dubai ResortRestaurant Qamar Terrace View© Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

Anantara World Islands Dubai Resort / Restaurant Qamar Terrace View
© Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

 
 

A vessel glides from the city, cutting through water, delivering guests to something unseen from the shore. Anantara World Islands Dubai Resort holds space in the silence, its edges dissolving into sky. Seventy accommodations—rooms, suites, villas—each defined by texture, proportion, and air. Beachfront Pool Villas stretch into the sand, Ocean View Suites catch the glow of the city at dusk. Qamar composes Middle Eastern and Indian influences into a singular expression. Helios captures Mediterranean elements without imitation. Luna’s rooftop turns the skyline into an unfolding sequence of reflection and shadow.

 

Suspension shapes experience. Hammocks drift above water, their rhythm dictated by the wind. A cinema at the water’s edge shifts perception, the moving image aconversation with the night. The Anantara Spa moves inward—Lava Shell Massage, Thai Salt Pot Therapy, weight, release, recalibration. Abu Dhabi’s coastline becomes a canvas, a composition of white forms against deep blue. Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat is not a replica, but a study of volume, proportion, and light. Twenty-two rooms and suites, each an articulation of space.

 
LE MILE Magazine Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat Royal Santorini Duplex Suite

Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat / Duplex Suite
© Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

 
LE MILE Magazine Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat Royal Santorini Exterior Beach Gerry O'Leary

Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat / Exterior Beach
© Gerry O'Leary

 
LE MILE Magazine Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat Royal Santorini Duplex Suite Bedroom

Anantara Santorini Abu Dhabi Retreat / Duplex Suite Bedroom
© Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas

 

Walls curve, negating sharp divisions. Infinity pools extend forward, tracing invisible thresholds. Thalassa refines Mediterranean culinary philosophy, an exercise in restraint. Oia Oasis breathes in mezze, coffee, the slow movements of evening. Time flows without measure. The spa envelops guests in sensation—Himalayan salt therapy, Hammam rituals, deep immersion in warmth. A movement inward, a fusion of body and space. These spaces exist in form, texture, and light. Surfaces shift, absorbing and releasing, shaping perception without effort. Water carries its weight with quiet certainty. Air moves unhindered, expanding into every corner. The journey follows no path.

 

Anantara crafts a unified experience, where each destination extends into the next, connected by a rhythm of design and presence. The Palm, the World Islands, Abu Dhabi’s coastline—each location carries its own energy, shaped by landscape, architecture, and atmosphere. The flow between them is seamless, an uninterrupted immersion into place and sensation.

 

Hotel Belvedere Locarno

Hotel Belvedere Locarno

.culture vulture
Hotel Belvedere Locarno

*A House of Art, Light, and Quiet Grandeur

 

Belvedere Locarno reads like a living collection, scenes arranged for calm, curiosity, and return.

 

The house carries a long arc—15th-century origins, hospitality since the late 19th—and the tone remains personal, shaped by a host family culture that prizes genuine welcome over performance. The city’s Piazza Grande sits within walking distance; the lake is always in the frame. Art steers the rhythm from the ground floor onward. Antonio Guanse’s L’art est Genèse (1962) holds the hall like a prologue, across from Georg Fischhof’s romantic cycle—twenty late-19th-century canvases joined into a single narrative field, restored and composed in 2007. A poised Cycliste de la Belle Époque glides by; Felice Filippini’s self-portrait brings a Ticino accent. Everyday museum, everyday movement.

Faces carry the story forward—Jean Talbot’s expressionist studies, a gentleman by Horace Richebé, and the elegant Peintre gentilhomme by René Thomsen. At bar level, photographs nod to the city’s cinephile heartbeat with portraits of illustrious guests from more than seventy editions of the Locarno Film Festival. This is the hotel’s soft bridge between garden hush and Piazza nights on the giant screen. Dining works like a miniature curation. La Fontana Ristorante & Bar carries 14 Gault&Millau points and a kitchen that thinks in Mediterranean lines with local detail. The walls chart the neighborhood through Claudio da Firenze (Claudio Domenici): views of Ascona, the Piazza Grande, and the Madonna del Sasso; a painted Belvedere from the early 1900s; a carved, polychrome wooden ceiling with mythic motifs. Summer steps outside to Grotto al Sasso for gelato, snacks, and an aperitivo under vines. Mornings begin generous; autumn folds in chestnuts, mushrooms, and game, with terraces that keep their warmth deep into October.

 
LE MILE Magazine Hotel Belvedere Locarno Colazione 2 Ristorante La Fontana Hotel Belvedere Locarno

Ristorante La Fontana
Hotel Belvedere Locarno

 
LE MILE Magazine Hotel Belvedere Locarno Bar Sigar Menu 3 Hotel Belvedere Locarno
 

Some rooms feel like chapters you want to re-read. Sala Affresco layers a monumental Renaissance stone fireplace—telamons, masks, garlands—with an 18th-century ceiling fresco of Persephone, a clear seasonal metaphor. Still lifes by Eugène Petit, Edmond Céria, Constantin Le Roux, and Joseph Villeclèr gather nearby; a mid-century Matterhorn view finishes the arc. Sala Veranda glows with Louis Wilmet’s L’Aurore, a dawn that quietly lifts the floor.

Corridors act like local atlases. Casa Sole moves through historical images of the Belvedere, Locarno, the Madonna del Sasso, Verzasca gorges, the Maggia, and Mario Botta’s churches. Casa Luna lines the walls with posters—originals and reproductions—from the Locarno Film Festival, while Casa Stella assembles “Ticino in European Painting,” a pocket survey of how this landscape echoes across centuries of art.

 

Wellness follows the same curatorial logic. The corridor to OASI BELVEDERE Spa • Wellness • Beauty features eight large panels by V. P. de Cayeux, Vence-inspired homages to Picasso, Matisse, Renoir, and Chagall—color grammar before water. Inside: 2,200 m² of calm with indoor and outdoor pools, saunas, steam, a Kneipp path, a bright gym, and four treatment rooms. Adults-only windows secure quiet. Treatments meet the guest where they are—Guinot facials, alpine Alpeor formulas, and rituals using camellia oil pressed from the hotel’s own garden. Yoga, meditation, crystal therapy, and Pilates in the green stretch the day without rush.

Guest rooms—ninety in total—open to light; many step onto balconies with lake views. Suites offer an intimate scale of collecting: Hannes Portmann lithographs, landscapes by Max Goviet, Raymond Quibel, and Charles Verbrugghe, and floral still lifes in quiet dialogue with the view. The effect is domestic and deliberate, a private edit for each stay.

 
LE MILE Magazine Hotel Belvedere Locarno Garden Oasi Belvedere Spa Wellness Beauty

Garden Oasi Belvedere Spa Wellness
Hotel Belvedere Locarno

 
LE MILE Magazine Hotel Belvedere Locarno Treatment Room Oasi Belvedere Spa Wellnes _Beauty

Treatment Room
Oasi Belvedere Spa Wellnes & Beauty

LE MILE Magazine Hotel Belvedere Locarno Oasi Belvedere Spa  Wellness Beauty  Piscina e idromassaggio

Oasi Belvedere Spa Pool
Hotel Belvedere Locarno

 
LE MILE Magazine Hotel Belvedere Locarno Oasi Belvedere Spa Wellness Centre by night

Oasi Belvedere Spa Wellness Centre by night
Hotel Belvedere Locarno

 

The garden edits the pace again. Two crystalline-marble works by Alex Näf—Lamusir and Ovaloid—trace smooth, tactile lines among the paths; Ernst Schneider’s granite figure, L’ospite (“The Guest”), stands as a sentinel to arrivals and returns. Benches, fountains, bocce lanes, and tucked terraces turn the grounds into a sequence of scenes.
Connection stays elegant and literal. A funicular stops at the hotel: upward to the Madonna del Sasso for a panoramic pause, downward into the old town and along the promenade. From here the itinerary draws itself—alleys and arcades, boats on Lago Maggiore, vineyards in Malcantone, autumn trails under copper beech and chestnut. The Belvedere sits at the hinge of refuge, culture, and city life; an address that filters noise and amplifies experience.

 

What endures is the human temperature. Professional, warm, and unforced, the team moves with a reader’s eye for detail and a host’s sense of timing. Breakfast tastes like holiday, the spa understands time, the garden rewards wandering, La Fontana serves clarity rather than show. People return because the house remembers how to receive them—an everyday museum, a working home, a view that settles in and stays. Enjoy Yourself!

 

visit Hotel Belvedere Locarno Website for more info www.belvedere-locarno.com
all images (c) Hotel Belvedere Locarno

A Retreat into WALD.WEIT - Rheingau Review

A Retreat into WALD.WEIT - Rheingau Review

.culture vulture
WALD.WEIT

*Where the Forest Breathes and the Vine Whispers

 

High above the Rheingau valley, somewhere between the sacred silence of the forest and the poised rows of Riesling vines, lies WALD.WEIT, a sanctuary designed to hold you.

 

The architecture emerges as a tribute to nature, shaped by its rhythm and presence. A rhythm of vertical wood, floor-to-ceiling glass, and gentle curves echoes the tall stillness of the Hahnwald that surrounds the property. Every line seems drawn from the land.

 
WALD.WEIT Lobby © Tim Karapetian LE MILE Magazine

WALD.WEIT Rheingau Hotel & Retreat, Lobby
seen Tim Karapetian

 
WALD.WEIT Nature © WALD.WEIT Rheingau Hotel & Retreat LE MILE Magazine

WALD.WEIT Rheingau Hotel & Retreat
Architecture

 

From our first step onto the elevated plateau near Kiedrich – a town that feels too poetic to be real – WALD.WEIT invites breath, real breath. That kind that expands your ribs, your pace, your presence.

The hotel’s design speaks in quiet textures. Neutral tones, tactile materials, and forms that feel shaped by the land itself. Inside the WALD.WEIT Suite, nature enters fully—through floor-to-ceiling windows, through the scent of wood, through stillness that fills the room like light. Every surface feels deliberate and every detail rests. Beds are oriented toward the treetops, terraces suspend you above the canopy, and silence is full of birdsong and stillness.

 

Then there’s the spa. Panoramic rooftop saunas, the hands of a massage team whose intuition needs no words, and treatments that seem to tap into the landscape’s own wisdom. Inhale fir, exhale fatigue. The upcoming 6,500m² spa extension promises an infinity pool that slips into a natural swimming pond, a body of water that mirrors sky and self.

At WALD.FEIN, the restaurant, the forest arrives again, but this time as flavor. Chef Falk Richter distills the region’s essence into each course, foraging aesthetics into the plate: fermented cauliflower, gold trout with dandelion and topinambur, and venison with birch bark pasta. Each ingredient local, each dish a dialogue. We sipped Robert Weils Riesling as a continuation of the story outside. With 300 labels to explore, each bottle unfolds its own complete tale.

 
WALD.FEIN Wine Robert Weil Riesling LE MILE Magazine

Robert Weil Riesling at WALD.FEIN Restaurant

WALD.WEIT seen by Tim Karapetian LE MILE Magazine

WALD.WEIT Rheingau Hotel & Retreat
seen Tim Karapetian

 
WALD.WEIT Suite Woman on Sofa enjoying nature view Thomas Ott

WALD.WEIT Suite
seen Thomas Ott

WALD.WEIT Suite Deserts seen by Tim Karapetian LE MILE Magazine

WALD.WEIT Suite
seen Tim Karapetian

 
WALD.WEIT Suite seen by Tim Karapetian Hotel Room

WALD.WEIT Suite
seen Tim Karapetian

 

WALD.WEIT carries its strength in the quiet continuity between indulgence and intention. Sustainability lives in every layer, from the geothermal system beneath the earth to the timber sourced from local forests, from smart automation that regulates warmth and light to architectural decisions rooted in ecological responsibility. The result is a place that speaks fluently in the language of longevity, where the air feels as considered as the materials, and where presence becomes part of the rhythm.

Beyond the retreat, the landscape opens into centuries of cultivated beauty. A forest path leads to Kloster Eberbach, where stone and silence hold Gothic history with grace. Further through the valley, the Weingut Robert Weil invites you into a world where Riesling is understood and where the process behind every vintage is shared with the joy, passion, and precision it deserves. A visit here is essential, as an immersion into the aesthetic and spirit of the Rheingau.

 

Time at WALD.WEIT stretches gently and days move between walking trails and mountain paths, between spa rituals and quiet forest air, between meals that nourish and views that still the mind. The garden welcomes you back after movement, after discovery, and after reflection. There’s only a returning to something grounded, deliberate, and whole.

This place resonates and every detail, from architecture to atmosphere, extends an invitation to dwell in balance—with the land, with time, with yourself. Enjoy your stay!

 

visit WALD.WEIT Hotel Website www.wald-weit.com
follow on Instagram @wald.weit.retreat


all images (c) WALD.WEIT