Siboney Beach ClubvsCopper & Lumber Store Hotel
Both hotels are highly recommended by professional travelers. Overall, Siboney Beach Club scores significantly better than The Copper and Lumber Store Historic Inn. Siboney Beach Club has a TripExpert Score of 83 with accolades from 6 reviewers like DK Eyewitness, Concierge and Frommer's.
Siboney Beach Club
Dickenson Bay, St. John's, Antigua
From $175/night
- Free Internet
- Laundry Service
- Restaurant
- Pool
- Free Parking
- Kitchenette
Frommer's
"The comfortable suites are in a three-story balconied building draped with bougainvillea." Full review
Concierge
"This is a place to laze the day away, but if you insist on being active, you can borrow a pair of binoculars and visit the nearby lagoon to spot snowy egrets, pelicans, and blue herons."
Fodor's
"This affordable beachfront oasis nestled in a tranquil corner of Dickenson Bay delights with intimacy and warmth." Full review
DK Eyewitness
"A small inn on Dickenson Bay Beach, this place offers personalized service and a lush garden setting."
Star Service
"On a picture-perfect palm-shaded beach, 5 kilometers north of St. John's, this property is the best of the small suite-hotels (read: apartment hotels) on the island." Full review
Lonely Planet
"Watch hummingbirds flutter among the frangipani trees from your patio or let massage therapist Barbara work out your kinks beneath the swaying palm trees." Full review
Copper & Lumber Store Hotel
Nelson's Dockyard, English Harbour, Antigua
From $215/night
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Free Breakfast
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
- Restaurant
Oyster
Mid-Range
"An 18th-century shipbuilding storehouse turned boutique hotel -- the Copper and Lumber Store stands as an enchanting, Georgian-style tribute to British naval history in the heart of Nelson's Dockyard." Full review
Lonely Planet
"This beautifully restored hotel was built in the 1780s to store the copper and lumber needed for ship repairs." Full review
Frommer's
"Forget a pool. Forget a beach. This is the 18th-century "museum hotel" of English Harbour." Full review
Lonely Planet
"It now has 14 studios and suites, each named after one of Nelson's ships. All open onto a flowery courtyard and burst with vintage flair courtesy of four-poster beds, brick walls, wooden beams" Full review